Hi there, I would greatly appreciate some advice on a small upgrade project I'd like to make on an audio appliance I've been repairing for my local Repair Cafe, where I act as the main electronics guru. Here's a description of my issue and how I intend to address it. I would greatly appreciate some feedback from anyone having dealt with such issues.
About 6 weeks ago, one guy came to the Repair Cafe to have us look at a badly fried Yamaha Stagepas 600i. This appliance consists of a self contained switching power supply, a Class D stereo amplifier, a DSP and a mixer, and is provided with two matched speakers. It is a reasonably good quality device, quite recent and expensive too, and it was purchased by a local school in order to organize parties and fairs.
On the last time this system was used, a group of stupid kids came several times and unplugged the device from the main while it was amplifying a signal. On the third time they did this, the main board blew up quite badly.
The main board is a complex system consisting of a SMPS power supply : on the primary I have a switching controller, 2 switching MOSFET and a transformer, on the secondary 6 voltage lines with rectifying diodes, LVR and filtering caps. After the secondary we have the class D stereo amplifier sharing the same PCB. A self contained solution, not really what we think of a reliable and serviceable piece of equipment to say the least !! DSP and mixer boards connect to this main board.
After the "unplug event" occurred, the primary side of the SMPS just completely busted into flames. One of the power MOSFET was shorted, the shunt resistor network going to this MOSFET (6 low values 1W resistors in parallel/series configuration) was wholly carbonized (see pictures), and the shunt sense line PCB trace going to the switching controller just vaporized, along with few diodes and resistors on the gate control line. I replaced all these SMD components along with the switching regulator, a 12V regulator and the optocoupler for good measures, and hard wired a current sense line back to the controller. When I started the board again I immediately fried the same MOSFET, but without damaging other components. After thorough investigation using a light bulb in series to limit current and a variac, I came to the conclusion that the transformer was also damaged, unwrapped it and discovered a completely fried primary (the picture only give a partial idea of the damages found on the primary wraps). I've ordered the part from Yamaha so the board will likely be back to life shortly.
What brings me here though is the analysis I did of the failure mode, and the fact that, in my opinion, this product has a major design flaw which I'd like to correct.
Before this main power supply/amplifier board, there is a big filtering PCB with several large inductors. It is a typical RLC filter required to filter backward reinjection of switching noise back into the mains. This filtering board has one typical slow fuse as an overcurrent protection, which did not trip when the main board fried. This filter board is directly supplying the main power supply/amplifier board with two AC Live and Neutral wires. My analysis of the failure is that when the kids unplugged the mains cable, the filter inductors were loaded with high current, as the system was amplifying a signal. Without an incoming supply, the filter inductors violently discharged into the lowest impedance path possible, downstream toward the SMPS supply and into the transformer, with a spike of several kV.
So in my opinion there should be a protection device between the filter and the main power board, in order to protect against such an event. There are only a couple of high power fuses (ceramic case resistors) on the main power board, but no MOVs, neon gas or spark gaps of any kind at the entry of this power board. I would like to install a protection device of some sort to avoid such a catastrophic failure in the future and was thinking on installing a MOV across Live and Neutral. The problem I see in this solution is that if such an event occurs again, and the mains cable is unplugged while the system is operating, and if the MOV trips, the energy from the filter inductors will find no way to escape the circuit, as the mains cable will be unplugged. I believe that these protection devices need a low impedance path to release the energy once they are shorted. Does anyone have an idea on how to design a protection circuit and how to install between the filter board and the main power board ? I think that it is also possible to install a pair of MOVs at the exit of the filter board, where I have a connection to the Earth of the chassis. One for the Live and one for the Neutral. But then the chassis would get to a high value voltage for a short time in case one or both of the MOVs do trip... Not sure this is the way to design this. Any idea about this ? I can provide the service manual and schematics for the whole system if required, it's too big to be added here.
Thanks for your help !!