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Thanks to all who has helped, especially jtwrace, I have set up my SDS258. Very powerful bass indeed! As mentioned earlier, I am only capable of changing a light bulb before this project. So, hope that my success is an encouragement to all novices. While it may take an hour for the DIY enthusiasts here to assemble, it took me about four days to ask all the questions and buy the correct parts. But it can be done! Unfortunately, I am travelling tomorrow for 10 days and have to abandon it for 10 days!
Can someone post a pic of an external power switch used with their class d amps ?. From my understanding the SPST switch connected to the power cord is used to shut off the power supply and having an external power switch installed on the amp board allows me to leave the power supply switch on and allows the amp to be on standby mode if no signal is received?
I don't understand why you wouldn't want to wire the way the instructions are...this way there is no power to the tranny > power board > amp board.
Interesting. I was under the impresssion it just shut the FETs off. Why does my heatsink still get warm in standby mode then? Just curious.steve
Mine is switched from the amp board because when I first got my amp there was no wiring diagram on the site, so I just followed the amp manual directions...
Both ways must be acceptable since they are both recommended. AC, by switching from the amp board does the heat sink remain warm as Steve mentioned? What about the transformer?
The way I have setup everything is exactly as shown in this filehttp://classdaudio.com/documents/transformer_115VAC_instructions.pdfWhat I would like to do is to leave the AC switch on all the time so I don't have to keep turning it on. My question is if I leave the small switch on the amp board on with the AC switch on, will this put the amp on standby mode if no signal is sent from the receiver/preamp?
Yes, but you still have high voltage (120VAC) to the transformer which is outputing to the power board...