Home Forums Product Discussion & Questions BeoMaster Beomaster 3000-2 heavy distortion from right channel

  • This topic has 30 replies, 4 voices, and was last updated 1 year ago by Wumpi.
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  • #49215
    Wumpi
    BRONZE Member

      I have a full distortion from right channel.

      From the voltage and signal trace I did  I discovered that there is no output voltage and signal  from 496 diode.I changed the diode but still nothing

      I swapped the transistors tr45 46 47 50 from the other channel but still nothing.

      I swapped the input signals cables which goes to amplifier pcb and again nothing changed

      I put new power supply capacitor and didn’t do anything

      Tr46 has voltage on emmiter and base but not in the collector

       

      Here is the schesmatic marked with no output

      I can’t  find any solution to my problem

      Any help would be appreciated.

      Thanks

       

      #49216
      Mark-sf
      BRONZE Member

        It sounds like TR46 is not being turned on. Are the voltages on its base and emitter as per the diagram?

        #49217
        Wumpi
        BRONZE Member

          It’s not tr46 cause I swapped from the left channel and still nothing..

          The commiter still has no output voltage while base and emmiter has..

          #49218
          Mark-sf
          BRONZE Member

            You misunderstood my suggestion.  If the voltages are not as specified in the schematic the transistor will not turn on even if it is good. What are the actual base and emitter voltages?

            #49219
            Wumpi
            BRONZE Member

              Hello Mark.

              The voltage in left good channel is around 22  on input diode and on right is 27 voltage.more close to factory.

              BUT this transistors are only for current protection. As the manual says.When I removed them the left channel had still voltage on diode output.

              Btw base voltage 28.6 emmiter 29 collector 0

               

               

              #49220
              Mark-sf
              BRONZE Member

                It’s possible you have a broken trace at the anode of the diode. Try a jumper from it to the base of TR47 and the collector of TR46. Don’t know what else to suggest based on what you are reporting.

                #49221
                Wumpi
                BRONZE Member

                  Hello.

                  Thanks for your interesting.

                  There is no voltage on anode leg of diode.i swapped two times with new but still nothing.

                  The trace is ok

                  I did a bridge between input and output of diode and I measured a significant voltage drop on the collector of tr50.Without the jumper the voltage was around 28 volt.

                  With jumper it went to 5 volt!!

                  Base volt was exactly 0.5volt

                  Any thoughts  on that?

                   

                  #49222
                  Mark-sf
                  BRONZE Member

                    The diode is blocking current flow from TR48 collector to base of TR47 as it conducts in the other direction due to the higher voltage that is supposed to be on the base. Therefore, it cannot be bypassed with a jumper.

                    You say there is 0 volts on the anode, is it the same at the collector leg of TR46 and the base leg of TR47? If you power down, what is the ohms reading to ground from the anode for each channel?

                    #49223
                    Wumpi
                    BRONZE Member

                      Exactly it’s 0 volt on two transistors as you describe..I check the traces and everything is fine.i will make the meausurement on diode tomorrow to see the results

                      Btw I tried to put voltage from base of tr46 on tr47 and i read 3 volt on collector of tr50.Without this voltage the collector goes around 29v.

                      Why is this drop assuming that the base should have this voltage?

                      THANKS

                      #49224
                      Wumpi
                      BRONZE Member

                        Anode right channel 568 kohm.

                        Left channel 590kohm

                        #49225
                        Wumpi
                        BRONZE Member

                          Finally I fix.

                          It seems that tr47 was damaged and from the swap proccess  from left channel  I accidentally put the same transistor..

                          I replacced it with bc161.

                          Now i must set the correct supply voltage.

                          The base voltage in right channel is 27.5 and left is 22.2

                          Thanks for your support

                          #49226
                          Mark-sf
                          BRONZE Member

                            Glad you got it sorted out as I was out of suggestions. First try the bias adjustment.

                            #49227
                            Wumpi
                            BRONZE Member

                              How much the bias should be set?where exactly should I look?

                              The problem is that  the replacement transistor burned again after a few minutes..

                              #49228
                              Mark-sf
                              BRONZE Member

                                The 250-ohm trimmer and TR45 governs how much no load bias is applied to each base. It is mounted on the heat sink to sense temperature and also adjust the bias. It’s possible that transister is bad or the adjustment is too high. The circuit calls for a BC311 and since the bias is not separately adjustable for its BC310 mate its possible that your BC161 is a poor match. Sorry, but its been too many years since I worked on one of these.

                                #49229
                                Wumpi
                                BRONZE Member

                                  But Bc 161 specs are almost identical with bc 311.

                                  Btw How many miliampere should I adjust?

                                  The manual doesn’t say anything for the adjustment.

                                  In which transistor base should  I put the multimeter probes to take meausurement?

                                  Thanks

                                   

                                  #49230
                                  Mark-sf
                                  BRONZE Member

                                    The base of TR45 should be adjusted to 27.2 which should give you 26.6 at the collector of TR48. If the base of TR44 is 29.2V and you still are seeing a drop to 22V then the speaker output voltage before the output cap can’t be 28v. Note that the positive side has an 100 ohm resister to isolate it where the negative doesn’t. You need to further investigate after  TR47 for the current draw.

                                    #49231
                                    Dillen
                                    Moderator

                                      Stop swapping components. It will only up the risk of more trouble.
                                      The idle current settings and measuring ponts are given in the service manual.
                                      It’s a voltage measured across the emitter resistors with no speakers attached and volume at zero (hence the term idle current).
                                      7,5 mV if I remember correctly – see the manual.
                                      But if a transistor burns, there is something else wrong – the burning transistor is not the reason.
                                      And if you replace one or more semiconductors in an output stage, you MUST set the idle current again at first power up.
                                      Bring the Beomaster up slowly on a variac while monitoring the idle current – power down immediately if something looks wrong.

                                      Did you replace the electrolytic capacitors in the output stage? If you did, did you fit low-ESR types? You shouldn’t, as that will often be asking for trouble.

                                      Martin

                                      #49232
                                      Wumpi
                                      BRONZE Member

                                        Hello.

                                        Which emmiter resistors are you referring?

                                        No I didn’t replace the output capacitors.

                                        The manual aI read doesn’t refer anything about bias procces setting.Not either any mv number set.I replaced tr47 bc311 with bc 161.But the base voltage would  come around 27 volt as I remember.

                                        #49233
                                        Dillen
                                        Moderator

                                          Don’t get me wrong, it may sound harsh but I mean this in the best of ways when I say that
                                          I have a feeling that you will not be the right person to do this repair.
                                          Your methods will only bring more headache, and it appears your electronic education and experience is limited. Right?

                                          Every educated electronic technician will know what the emitter resistors are and how to
                                          measure idle currents.
                                          The manual may state a mA figure, which is and refers to the actual current,
                                          but a brief look at the emitter resistors value and a little bit of Ohms law will
                                          allow you to measure the current through a resistor as a voltage across it, and
                                          as an added bonus you can measure it without disturbing the circuit by lifting components.
                                          You only need to take the top cover off to measure and adjust.

                                          And I wasn’t referring to the output series capacitors. I was referring to the capacitors
                                          in the output stage itself, as that is where the problem is.
                                          They must be replaced, and it’s good advice to never fit low-ESR types in a circuit like this.

                                          Output stages like this can give even trained tech people a good run for their money.

                                          Martin

                                          #49234
                                          Dillen
                                          Moderator

                                            The base of TR45 should be adjusted to 27.2

                                            – No.
                                            You adjust the idle current to a given current flow at the output stage emitter resistors as stated and shown in the manual.
                                            The voltages stated in the schematics are not for alignment purposes.
                                            They are merely to help diagnosing in that you can see if a voltage is far off.

                                            In a working circuit, the voltage(s) stated at TR45 will change with temperature, as will the voltages stated later in the circuit, because that is what
                                            the circuit is built to do.
                                            TR45 measures the temperature on the cooling fin and adjusts the final
                                            output stages accordingly.
                                            A transistors amplification increases with temperature, so if nothing grabs
                                            and controls it, it would run astray until something starts burning.
                                            That’s also why idle currents always are to be set with the amp (output stage/cooling fins) at room temp.

                                            Martin

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