Smoke on my power amp


I was listening the music with the right speaker wire detached to listen to the left speaker alone. The speaker wire was still attached at the amp side. My preamp does not have the balance knob.
After 20 secs or so, there was a smoke on my power amp.
I quickly turn off the amp.
Once smoke comes, would it be safe to turn it on again? I wonder whether it is permanently damaged.
Is it not safe to listen to the music with the speaker wire detached from one speaker but still attached on the amp side?
My amp is Plinius SA 102.
Any comment?
thx


128x128ihcho
All I know is that the vast majority of amps I own or have owned have a huge warning in the owner’s manual that states not to operate the amp without speakers being hooked up. And I think you now know why. It is NOT safe to operate so don’t even think about it...
I thought I’d weigh in here. Basically this means the vast majority of your amps are fundamentally unstable. An open circuit is the easiest load on the planet - no current flows -- on the condition that the amp is stable. Inherently stable, not "stable when driving loads we kinda hope are there". It usually means that am amp is not inherently stable, **and** that the speaker load forms part of the feedback loop. Note this is a problem with opamps, and is corrected by either "compensating" it (which has side effects) or operating it only within certain parameters - typically not unity gain. Ive designed dozens of amps of various types (chip based, BJT, FET, valve/tube...), some for myself, some for production, some for others to produce, or derive something from. Every single one was unilaterally stable. Open circuit? Might as well be off. Happy as a clam.
So the above may well be true, but in my opinion its a sad situation. I think I’ll go upstairs, unplug the speakers and turn the volume to 11. Just because I can.
So, in the end read the owners manual. but also wonder why the condition is so. To be totally fair, my stuff has some odd requirements too (so read my manuals!) - mostly because i typically leave certain low-power-draw parts operating 24/7 for a variety of sonic reasons - and without on/off cycles they last longer, not shorter. Odd but true.  I used to tape the fuse to the part of the owners manual with warnings. People woudl call up and say "it wont turn on". Did you read the manual?  Humm? Notice anything?  :-)  G
@itsjustme, thanks for your comment. I would add, though, that in the specific case of tube amps having output transformers it seems pretty well established that such amps should not be operated unloaded while they are processing a signal. The concern being that "inductive kick" occurring in the transformer in that situation may damage the transformer and/or the output tubes. And I suppose the same may apply to the many McIntosh solid state amplifiers which have autoformers at their outputs.

Regards,
-- Al

I also like to point out that without a Zobel-network and output inductor built-in, some direct-coupled output solid state amplifier can becomes unstable and go into oscillation without connected to a load, especially connected to a pair of long speaker cable with open end!
 
This is an example of amplifier schematic featured Zobel and inductor: 

https://www.seventransistorlabs.com/tmoranwms/Circuits_2008/2N6254_Power_Amp.gif
In case of TubeAmps!!! Never allow to run it without speakers connected!!!!
In case of the rest, do not shortcut the speaker cable.
Good amps should have safety measures but lets be honest... most up to 5000$ do not have it.
In case of smoke NEVER POWER SUCH EQUIPMENT unless you are professional. Give it back to pro service.
After all YOU HAVE ONE LIFE and this is electrical device.
This is one of the reason why i finally ended with MCintosh.
Not all savings are savings in time function.
Thx,