165
20 W Stereo Integrated Audio Amplifier
•
Carefully adjust the Hum Balance control for minimum signal level. A typical value is
about – 80 dB.
•
Repeat these steps for the left channel.
Adjustment of the Hum Balance control may or may not have a significant impact on the
noise floor. Also, the optimal adjustment point may be different from one channel to the next. In
this event, split the difference. The most likely cause of an amplifier not being able to meet the
noise target is a noisy 6U8A input tube. If one channel can meet the target but the other cannot,
try swapping the input tubes. If the problem moves with the tube, then the device is defective and
should be replaced.
It is possible that lowest noise is found at opposite ends of the Hum Balance control for the
right and left channels. If this is the case, remove power and switch the filament connections to
the right channel PWB (switch the wires to 6VH1 and 6VH2).
7.2.3
Clipping Point
The clipping point of the amplifier may be checked as follows:
•
Connect an 8 Ω 15 W load to the output terminals. Connect an oscilloscope and audio
frequency voltmeter to the output.
•
Set the Input switch to Line Input. Set the Volume control fully clockwise.
•
Apply a 1 kHz signal to the Line input while observing the oscilloscope. Find the point at
which the top of the trace begins to flatten. This is the clipping point. Check the
oscilloscope trace to confirm that clipping is symmetrical; i.e., the same amount of
clipping is observed on the positive and negative peaks. For this amplifier, the clipping
point should be reached at an input level of approximately 1.5 V rms.
•
Back off the audio input level slightly so that clipping just disappears. For this amplifier,
this point is typically 1.3 V rms.
•
Read the value displayed on the ac voltmeter. Determine the power as follows:
P
=
E
2
/
R
,
where
E
= the voltage measured by the audio voltmeter and
R
= 8 (the load resistance).
For this amplifier, the voltage measured is typically 11 V, which translates to 15 W. This
is the maximum operating point of the amplifier.
Check one channel, and then the other. Note that the peak power available from the amplifier
will tend to decrease as the output tubes age. The input line voltage will also impact the output
Summary of Contents for JC Whitaker 20 W Stereo Integrated Audio Amplifier
Page 1: ...20 W Stereo Integrated Amplifier WhitakerAudio 20 W Stereo Integrated Audio Amplifier ...
Page 11: ...11 20 W Stereo Integrated Audio Amplifier Figure 1 1 b ...
Page 16: ...16 WhitakerAudio Figure 1 2 b ...
Page 20: ...20 WhitakerAudio Figure 1 3 Power management circuit for the 20 W integrated stereo amplifier ...
Page 38: ...38 WhitakerAudio Figure 3 1 Component layout for the Amplifier PWB 1 right board ...
Page 40: ...40 WhitakerAudio Figure 3 2 Rectifier PWB component layout ...
Page 45: ...45 20 W Stereo Integrated Audio Amplifier Figure 3 4 Layout of the speaker terminal PWB ...
Page 84: ...84 WhitakerAudio Figure 5 6 Power management PWB a component side b foil side a b ...
Page 188: ...20 W Stereo Integrated Amplifier WhitakerAudio 20 W Stereo Integrated Audio Amplifier ...
Page 196: ...196 WhitakerAudio ...