Updates:
About one week after using the Jensen PI-2RX, the Ref 150 fuses blow twice. The second time one of the electronic part overheated. I wrote to ARC and here what they answer:
"The overheated part is the turn-on surge resistor, R67. This is a 21.5 ohm / 25W resistor that is designed to cushion the current in-rush at cold turn-on of the REF150. The reason the resistor has overheated is there is a fault that is preventing the RY1 AC power relay from closing after about 1.5 seconds and bypassing this resistor. If the AC relay does not close, R67 will very quickly overheat, as it is not meant to be in-circuit for more than a few seconds. A schematic is attached. Have your technician troubleshoot the soft-start circuit to determine the fault. Note that in 220-240VAC models, this resistor is 21.5 ohms, not the 5 ohms shown on the schematic."
I was asking is this cause by the transformer or due to tubes problem (power tubes about to change) but ARC didn't give any answer.
In the mean time, I got a copy of CAT SL1 Ultimate manual and noticed that there was some instruction on how to connect the preamp properly to a balanced amp as follow:
"When using amplifiers with balanced inputs, the negative leg of the balanced input should be shorted to ground. This prevents hum and noise problems caused by the floating inputs. While most amplifiers with balanced inputs provide a switch for this purpose, inserting a jumper in the XLR connector will accomplish the task. Alternately, an XLR connector can be prepared with this jumper soldered internally, and the connector then inserted into the XLR jack."
If the CAT's wired method for the RCA to XLR cable really works, I think perhaps it's better to stick to the conversion interconnect cable.
Any advice?
Thanks in advance!
About one week after using the Jensen PI-2RX, the Ref 150 fuses blow twice. The second time one of the electronic part overheated. I wrote to ARC and here what they answer:
"The overheated part is the turn-on surge resistor, R67. This is a 21.5 ohm / 25W resistor that is designed to cushion the current in-rush at cold turn-on of the REF150. The reason the resistor has overheated is there is a fault that is preventing the RY1 AC power relay from closing after about 1.5 seconds and bypassing this resistor. If the AC relay does not close, R67 will very quickly overheat, as it is not meant to be in-circuit for more than a few seconds. A schematic is attached. Have your technician troubleshoot the soft-start circuit to determine the fault. Note that in 220-240VAC models, this resistor is 21.5 ohms, not the 5 ohms shown on the schematic."
I was asking is this cause by the transformer or due to tubes problem (power tubes about to change) but ARC didn't give any answer.
In the mean time, I got a copy of CAT SL1 Ultimate manual and noticed that there was some instruction on how to connect the preamp properly to a balanced amp as follow:
"When using amplifiers with balanced inputs, the negative leg of the balanced input should be shorted to ground. This prevents hum and noise problems caused by the floating inputs. While most amplifiers with balanced inputs provide a switch for this purpose, inserting a jumper in the XLR connector will accomplish the task. Alternately, an XLR connector can be prepared with this jumper soldered internally, and the connector then inserted into the XLR jack."
If the CAT's wired method for the RCA to XLR cable really works, I think perhaps it's better to stick to the conversion interconnect cable.
Any advice?
Thanks in advance!