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This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and 1st March February 2012

 

Latest post 03-23-2011 6:26 AM by tournedos. 16 replies.
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  • 03-04-2011 8:59 AM

    Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Hi all,

    I just got an old Beocenter 1400 with a problem: it has blown its fuses and with new ones, after connecting mains gives a short rumble from speakers then blows fuses again (these are the mains fuses, not the tape deck one).

    Does this sound like a capacitor/trimmer job (much too high idle current) ?

    Before looking deeper into its components, just asking if there are known and/or typical faults for this design (Beomaster 901, Beocenter 1400 etc, Beomaster 600 quad even?) ?

     

    -jari

  • 03-04-2011 9:22 AM In reply to

    • Dillen
    • Top 10 Contributor
    • Joined on 02-14-2007
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    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Could be a capacitor problem, that can almost never be ruled out but
    it could also be a blown output stage or even the transformer itself.

    You can isolate the transformer by lifting off its secondary leads.
    You can also put an ohmmeter across the output stage transistors (unpowered)
    and compare one channel to the other.

    Martin

  • 03-05-2011 7:30 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Thanks Martin,

     

    turns out to be blown output transistors. Any recommendations what to use instead of the original BD697/BD698 Darlingtons, which are no longer available (not easily, anyway) ? As a matter of fact, in my kit these transistors are not originals - they have been replaced with BD899/BD910 and TIP125/TIP120 pairs.

    -jari

  • 03-05-2011 2:27 PM In reply to

    • Dillen
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    • Joined on 02-14-2007
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    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    First see if you can find out why it happened. Check the DIN sockets, the solder tags are often very close
    and a short here will kill the output stage.
    Next, check if other components are damaged too; Resistors, driver transistors, diodes, trimmer etc.

    Two different ways of mounting was used on Beocenter 1400 cooling fins and the transistors
    housings varies accordingly. Some have a fairly large countersunk area around the screw hole.
    Can you provide a photo or closer description of the transistors ?

    Martin

  • 03-05-2011 3:33 PM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    DIN socket and solder tags look OK to me.

    Checking around it seems that at least the driver transistor and trimmer of left channel need replacing... actually looks like a lot of the components have been changed/tampered with!

    Here is a photo of the transistors, BD899/BD910 pair on the right (left channel, the bad one) and TIP125/TIP120 pair on left.

    -jari


  • 03-06-2011 2:56 AM In reply to

    • Dillen
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    • Joined on 02-14-2007
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    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Oh, looks like someone with very little soldering skill did something here.
    Can you provide a photo or two of the component side too ?

    Martin

  • 03-06-2011 3:43 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Here is a close-up of the left channel components. A number of caps and a trimmer has been changed sometimes, too.

    Going to change all the caps anyway, and comparing with the other channel (assumed to be OK) all suspect components around the output stage.

    On the power darlingtons: from some charts on the internet I found recommendations to use BD652/BD651 or BDX53B/BDX54B pair (instead of BD697/BD698). Any thoughts on that ? (I am not very familiar with this audio stuff, more at ease with digital/computer electronics.)

    One peculiarity of this design are the output stage driver darlingtons (2TR21 and 29, MPSA13), which are bend down thru a hole in the PCB to a lump of cooling paste. looks like an original feature, but never seen anything like it before!

    -jari


  • 03-07-2011 10:36 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    jrantala:

    One peculiarity of this design are the output stage driver darlingtons (2TR21 and 29, MPSA13), which are bend down thru a hole in the PCB to a lump of cooling paste. looks like an original feature, but never seen anything like it before!

    I'm wondering this too.
    I'm familiar with potting two transistors together for thermal tracking. But this is just one transistor potted to the PCB.

  • 03-07-2011 4:54 PM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Best to change all the transistors.The MPSA13 is quite crucial to the stable operation of the output stage.It's mounted through the board,and encased in thermal conductive paste.This means the temperature of the output stage is monitored,and the dc conditions stabilised as necessary.

    As Martin say's,this output stage is "touchy"and easily blown.I alway's used to rebuild them by replacing all the devices and the two emitter resistors (the big 2w jobbies)

    To be extra safe I'd use a variac to slowly wind up the supply voltage while monitoring.Not something generally available I realise.I still managed to get through several devices in some cases,before sucessfully sorting it!

    Take care with it.Nice sounding amp,worth the effort

  • 03-10-2011 9:04 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Partial success!?

    Changed all 5 transistors, 4 diodes, the 2 big resistors and 4 capacitors of left channel. At least 2 diodes were blown (as well as the output darlingtons), cannot say about the driver darlington as couldn't get it out in one piece.

    Now the fuses stay OK when I power up, the 32V is OK but I cannot adjust the idle current on that channel (right channel idle current is OK). I get a reading around 750mV which is way too much, and the trimmer doesn't seem to affect that at all. What could be wrong there ? Could it be the big 3000uF output capacitor ? Or do I just change all the remaining parts (resistors mostly) ?

    I also measured some voltages to compare with info from the service guide: TR22 base 20V (25V in service guide), TR23 base 17V (22,5V), 18V (23V) between the emitter resistors and 14V (19V) on TR19 base. I used BD651/BD652 pair as power darlingtons, do they have any effect on these reference voltages ?

    -jari

  • 03-10-2011 10:17 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    I'm interested in this too, as I have a Beomaster 1100 that blows the 0.39 ohm resistors in one channel.

    Are the BD651/BD652 usable? In that case I'm going to stock some up, as they are cheap and readily available now.

    Any modern/common equivalents to the other transistors?

  • 03-10-2011 10:39 AM In reply to

    • Dillen
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    • Joined on 02-14-2007
    • Copenhagen / Denmark
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    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Good job so far.
    The trimmer could easily be bad too.
    They occasionally burn with the drivers and they will often have oxidized beyond hope anyways.
    I suggest you replace it and try adjusting again, don't power it up again before doing that.
    If that's a success, I suggest you replace the trimmer in the other channel too.

    Actually, an oxidized trimmer could be the original reason the output stage has blown and
    it may have fooled the previous repairer who mounted the "new" output stage.

    Martin

  • 03-10-2011 11:19 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    OK, thanks, I'll try that.

    However, I did measure the trimmers (in-circuit) and they seemed to be OK (range ca. 0-870 Ohms) on both channels.

    -jari

  • 03-10-2011 11:53 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    First thing in nearly all vintage. Change all caps, change trimmers where posible to adjust without problems, clean the rest carefully.

    Beosound 3000, BL 4000, BL 8000, BG 2404,BG 5000, BG CD50, Beocord 5000, BM 901, BM 2400, BM 4000, BV S45, BV 3702. There is nothing we cannot do, but a lot of things we don't want to do!!

  • 03-23-2011 3:36 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Finally got time to replace the trimmers as well... but no luck!

    New trimmer had no effect on the left channel, i.e. the idle voltage is still around 750mV and the trimmer has no noticeable effect on it at all. What next ?

    On the brighter side, I also have a wreck of a Beomaster 5500 which had one channel burning the fuses. After the (partially) encouraging repair of the BC1400, I changed all the transistors and caps as well as the big resistors and trimmers - and that was success! Now the BM5500 works again nicely ;)

    -jari

  • 03-23-2011 6:09 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    Looking more closely into the rest of the components, I got a slightly low value when measuring the resistor R141, ca.36 ohms compared to correct value (and in other channel) of 47 ohms. Could this be causing the extra idle current ??

  • 03-23-2011 6:26 AM In reply to

    Re: Beocenter 1400 burning fuses

    I would replace that in any case - the resistor seems to be part of the biasing circuit and the value is way past the original tolerance of ±10%.

    Those carbon composition resistors often change their resistance permanently when they overheat.

    But, I would also concentrate on why the test voltage on TR19's base is so far off. It will have a direct effect to the operating point of the amp.

    -mika

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