Plug your amp to a 'Dim Bulb Tester' to find out if any repair is required.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRFRwOnLsZI&t=15s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRFRwOnLsZI&t=15s
Smoke on my power amp
Plug your amp to a 'Dim Bulb Tester' to find out if any repair is required. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRFRwOnLsZI&t=15s |
@ihcho The Google Photos links you provided in your last post don’t work, at least for members of the public. I’m not sure how or if photos uploaded to Google Photos can be shared publicly. If you upload the photos to Google Drive, though, and then select/highlight each of them, one of the icons which will appear at the top of the listing will allow you to create a shareable link. Regards, -- Al |
first .... there is nothing wrong to run an amp without speakers or only one channel. but disconnect speaker cables from the amp terminals to prevent speaker wires accidental short... most new amps has adequate protection , but vintage ones do not survive . so you got 2 possibilities... one is the other ends of speaker cables touched each other . or just bad luck and amp got fried with no reason whats so ever . now, can you turn on the amp ?preferably not... for one reason ...to help a repair man. when he opens the unit and turn it on hopefully the defective part still smokes and he can easily determine the problem. but if you continue to press power button the part eventually would stop smoking and if there is no easily noticeable burn mark troubleshooting is more difficult . |
My bad. https://www.flickr.com/photos/186572523@N06/49415455691/in/dateposted-public/ https://www.flickr.com/photos/186572523@N06/49415663367/in/dateposted-public/ I have not turned it on again since the smoke. I am trying to find which repair shop to send this amp to. It looks like there is no place working on Plinius amp in Michigan. Might try Chicago, or send it to Plinius Repairs in CA. Again, thanks. |
I looked at the photos pretty carefully, and the one thing I see that I’m suspicious about involves two of the output transistors in the right channel, the circuitry for which appears in the left half of the second photo. At the extreme left of the circuit board you’ll see ten power transistors that are attached to a metal sidewall of the chassis, each of which has three leads (connections) to the circuit board. The lowermost of those transistors is near the bottom left of the photo, and the uppermost of those transistors is near the top left of the photo. Counting from the bottom up, the third and the fourth of those transistors appear to have a grayish blob straddling (and perhaps short-circuiting) the two uppermost of their three connections. Perhaps a close-up photo of those transistors would provide further insight. BTW, the two glass fuses in each channel (four total), which are not far from the center of the photo, are "DC rail" fuses, which should provide some degree of protection for the output transistors. But without having a schematic or otherwise being familiar with the details of the design it’s hard to say what "some degree" means. Good luck. Regards, -- Al |