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Bob… I never had to have my 2Cherry repaired. Because I live in Florida with lots of lightening, I never leave the system powered on, so almost no chance for shorting. As for the sleeves, I’ve used those on and off over the years depending on the binding posts of the amp I had at the time… and when I kept reading about Cherries shorting out, it seemed like posting this idea might help others.
I went through quite a process to match MOSFET's both for current and voltage to less than 1%. I selected a pair and replaced the shorted pair of MOSFET's; I did not replace the functional pair. The amp works and sounds great.If you have what sounds like a small relay clicking, that's likely an overcurrent protection in case a channel shorts out. You can easily check by unplugging the AC power plug, removing the top cover and using a DVM to check resistance between the 3 leads on the FET; for my shorted channel, all 3 combos of lead pairs showed a short so was easy to confirm.If someone needs pair(s) for a channel, I can match more and sell them to you.For those wanting to repair a unit, realize the MOSFET's are challenging to gently remove without damaging the PC board traces. I may entertain replacing MOSFET's on cards that have known shorted MOSFET's; shipping the card costs less than shipping the whole amp. Most other repairs will be harder without a schematic. Seems to be an FPGA or similar on the board.Bob
I would be interested to know where to get DAC amps repaired as well. Last fall, I purchased a pair of 3 King Cherry amps for vertically tri-amping a speaker that was being built for me. I did not have a way to test the amps during the wait time, as my other system is fully active with built in Hypex amps. My new speakers finally arrived this past Friday and I hooked everything up. One of the amps is having an issue. It will play for 10 minutes or so, then completely shut off for about 10 seconds, then will come back on. Obviously disappointing, and I would like to get it fixed. I do have other amps and configurations I can use, so it is not keeping me from listening. Sadly, Tommy is gone and I would like to find someone that can do the repair. It may be something simple, but I am not sure. I do hear some switching in the amp so I am wondering if it has something to do with the automatic idle used. Just guessing.
Yes Bob, the sound is like what you described, a relay clicking. If there is no fuse, the situation I thought is even worse. The thing is I live in Turkey, so difficult to find someone who understands class d amps... If there is a failed card issue, I'll need all the help. Shorting from a touch of speaker cables is more common. But taking out XLR cable is what I did in all my previous amps. Nothing happened. A disturbing sound from speakers came at most. And I'm seriously thinking about selling it... Considering even sending to somewhere else, all repair, transportation and the extra VAT reduced price...
Thanks for the reply. I hope it works and you can help others out. Mine will hopefully be done this week. Thank You,Ron
Hi Ron: Where did you have your amp fixed and what needed to be repaired? See recent postings on getting MOSFET's & fixing mine. Bob
For those that my be interested, I have used this company to repair boards, they do good work:https://circuitrework.com/My contact:aprice@circuitrework.com