Hello people,
Warning : long post, please come back when you have some time ahead of you... then grab a cup of tea and a packet of your favorite biscuits to go with it.
Just done fixing my childhood 30 year old CD player donated by the old man, that old swing arm Philips :
https://www.eevblog.com/forum/repair/vintage-cd-player-repair-philips-cdc-486-6-disc-changer/msg3366804/#msg3366804Now need an amplifier and some loudspeakers so I can hear something out of it...
No, I don't have any... since I left the parent's home 20 years ago, I never bought "proper" audio gear, since I am not an audio guy so to speak.
So always had other priorities...
So far I have just been playing music from my desktop computer via half decent little Altec-lansing amplified speakers sitting on the desk either side of the monitor.
I am a simple man. Maybe too simple ?!......
Anyway, have at last a home of my own, so I can now contemplate a more "permanent" installation, and envisage at long last to get some proper audio gear sitting in the living room.
The CD player is dealt with. Now need an amp.
My knowledge of amplifiers is limited to what follows :
- At the back there are lots of connectors. Some of them you connect the CD player to, and some others you shove bare wires into, that would be the loudspeakers I believe.
- At the front there is a big power switch, fancy LED lit buttons to select an input source, and of course that big knob to make the thing sound louder or quieter. " Volume control " I think they call it. Sometimes there are more buttons, to control treble/bass/balance.
That's about it...
To make it cheap, I bought a used amp of course, and to make it even cheaper I bought a broken one. This way I would get some fun (or not...) trying to repair it ?! ... and learn some stuff about audio amps along the way. That's the plan anyhow...
So I sorted by price and just picked the first decent looking amp I could find. So, destiny had me buy this amp: a Sony F261R , Ultra 5000 v2.0 limited Bonus Mega sound edition. Whatever... it's an old amp about the era of the CD player, a tad younger... I figured that whatever I picked, it had to be at least as good as the built-in sound chip on the motherboard of my 15 year old computer, and built-in amplifier in the little speakers.
Paid 10 Euros for it, plus 8.5 for shipping, so no big deal...
Seller said that the problem is that "stereo does not work any more".
ME : cool, maybe just one or two power transistors to replace in the affected channel.
REALITY : Just AFTER having made the deal, not before.... hum.. I downloaded the service manual for it. Happy enough that there was one available to begin with ! A quick look at the schematic revealed that oh.. crap, power stage is not made of easily replaceable, discrete trannies, no. It's an integrated power amp IC ! A huge IC, 18 pins in line. An STK4182-Mk2.
So... if the chip is bad then good luck finding a new one. Best I could find were used ones in China for a few bucks. But well, at least chip is not complete unobtainium, so it could be worse.
So I received the amp yesterday evening, and started on it right away. Was so impatient to discover my first audio amp and start playing with it.
However since it's my first one and I know nil about audio stuff, I figured I would bother the forum with this repair... so that people in the know can give advise and share their knowledge and experience that's bound to be infinitely superior to mine... anything greater than zero is infinite, after all...
So let's get started !
Popped the hood. Looks very clean and tidy, Japanese style. Looks very basic too. No big toroƮdal transformer. Other than the power supply and front panel board, the business end of the thing is a single board construction, a small one at that. Single side, large through-hole components, easy access to everything. Simple construction. That will make it easy to probe around, just what I need for a first repair... happy with that.
So before touching anything, I gave the thing a test ride to confirm the seller's symptoms. I don't have speakers just yet, haven't had time to start hunting for some yet. I just have my big headphones. So I plugged them on the front jack : works just fine ?! Sounds good, I have sound in both ears no problems. Balance and tone controls work fine, main volume knob too....
Hmmm... strange... too good to be true. So I thought it's good and bad news : probably means that the headphones being low power maybe are not fed by the big power amp STK chip, but either directly by the input signal (not knowing any better...), or maybe a small low power chip somewhere. On the plus side, it meant that 90% of the amp was good : power supply, input selection mechanism, tone, balance and volume control... so a lot of the unit was clearly working.
So it looked like the stereo problem was probably affecting only the loud speaker, not the headphones.
Stuffed the DMM into the speaker connectors at the back... gotta do with what you have eh ?
Readings were strange... 2.5 VAC on one channel, 2V on the other one, which quickly declined to 0.5V while the other stayed at 2+ V. OK I thought... there is indeed a problem with one of the channels. Looks like maybe thermal issue that takes a couple minutes to progressively manifest itself ? Except that I then power cycled the amp and this time the readings were different.. channels were reading the same this time, and then they declined to 0.5V, but in unison. There was no longer one channel behaving differently than the other. Checked DC levels, got 0mV, dead zero. Good news I thought ?! I don't know...
At any rate, there was SOMETHING coming out of the both channels. It's not like there was sometihng on one channel, and the other channel was 100% dead. No.
So I was starting to have some hopes that the STK maybe was not dead. Just maybe.
So I pulled the main board out of the unit so I could give it a good close-up visual inspection. On the component side I didn't see anything obvious. No burn marks. No brown glue going bad/conductive (no glue at all on this board). As for the 34 electrolytic caps on that board, none were bulging, and none were leaking. A third of them are Nichicon and Elna branded so happy with that. Those are the bigger ones, and those located near the power amp and power supply. The remaining 65% are small caps located in the low power parts of the board, and are crappy "Jamicon" brand. They sit high above the board surface so one can easily see if they are leaking. The bigger caps however sit flush on the board so I can't see underneath them.
But, at least at first glance, nothing massively wrong with caps.
Then I flipped the board to inspect the solder side. All the joints looked nice and shiny. Could not find any bad joints at first glance. Wiggled the power amp chip to see if I could "trigger" some joints... but not that I could see. A bit disappointed then ! LOL
Still, since I was in there, and just for peace of mind, I reflowed some joints :
- All 18 joints of the STK power amp chip.
- Connector for the large flat flex cable that comes from the front panel board.
- The relay
- The speaker connectors.
Put the board back into place and gave it another test ride.
Somehow it behave differently :
- Now I get the same voltage on both channels. Obviously it's dancing up and down as the song from the CD player is unfolding, but you could see that both channels behaved very similarly none the less. Also, if I move the Volume knob, voltage goes up and down as you would expect, and affects both channels the same way. So... it looked like at a fundamental level at least, it was doing something promising...
So to go any further I would now have to take it a step further and plug actual speakers to hear what it sounded like in practice, what was actually going on. Didn't feel like waiting weeks to hunt for speakers, so instead I stuffed some bits of wires on the speaker connectors, and used that to hook a couple probes to check with a scope what was coming out of the connectors...
It was looking pretty good : waveforms looked like music to me, dancing around in unison with the music playing from the CD. Also, both channels looked similar in shape and amplitude. So kinda happy with that.Volume knob was able to vary the amplitude of the waveforms from tiny to super large, so looked good.
So I really needed some speakers to try it out, was getting excited that it might be working now !
So... I thought maybe I could hook up my headphones to the speaker outputs ?! At first I thought it might blow them and I would be very unhappy, but well, had to do something ! I thought maybe if I set the volume to zero and increase it only extremely slowly, a tiny little bit, maybe the headphones would be able to cope with it. At any rate, worse case scenario, I paid the headphones 15 Euros 15 years ago, and one of the wire is chewed up, the wire is exposed. so I was not gonna cry if they did blow...
So I searched my ton of random salvaged parts and found a headphone socket. Soldered 50cm of wires to it, just enough so I can bring the socket back to the front of the unit, for convenience. Turned the volume all the way down. Plugged the headphones, powered up the amp... and anxiously, extremely slowly increased the volume....
we have sound ! And it sounds just fine, and in both ears !
Balance control works fine too. It just... works.
With the volume set 5 to 10% it's fine. At 15% it's very loud and at 20% it's getting ear damaging... So 15% max it is for headphones.
YES ! It's fixed !!!
Retrospectively, I think the most probable is that the problem was bad solder joints on the speaker connectors, causing intermittent, unreliable connections, leading to random weird voltage readings. Reflowing them fixed the problem. Knowing that, I might consider pulling the board again, to suck all that old crusty solder and put some fresh solder in there...
So... EVEN if the joints look fine at first glance.. reflow the usual culprits ANYWAY, you never know !!!
So... the big STK power chip is working in the end, got lucky ! LOL
HOWEVER.... even though the main issue is fixed, I still have other minor issues that you may be able to help me with...
1)
The headphone jack at the front, no longer works ?! Well, it works strangely at the least : I can hear the music playing, but I need to crank up the volume to 50%. Also, it sounds weird, very hollow... sorry I don't know my sound description terminology... It sounds like the singer is 2 miles away from me, very faint. The mid-range frequencies are almost absent. I can hear mostly high-frequencies, and even then they sound "metallic".. it all sounds very weird.
Also, the balance control acts bizarrely too ! It doesn't change balance at all : no matter its position fully to the left or right, it always spits out a balanced/normal output. Also, strange too : I noticed that if I turn the balance control all the way to the left or to the right, it changes the sound and makes it sound almost normal.
But as soon as you disconnect the headphones from the front jack, and plug it to the back of the unit on the speaker outputs... sound is perfect and the balance control now acts as it should !
So the weird sound and balance control weirdness only show when using the headphone output on the front panel.
Also, I noticed while probing the speaker outputs with the scope, that when I plug the headphone at the front, the speaker output, which normally I think are supposed to be disconnected by the relay ( I can hear it clicking whenever I insert or extract the headphone jack into its socket)... actually DO output something ! I see a clean sine wave oscillation ! Eh ? Well it's a sine wave when the volume is set very low. The lower the output the higher the frequency. 275kHz in this case. Then as I increase the volume, the amplitude of the oscillations increases too, and the frequency gets lower and lower. The lower it gets to, is about 35kHz, at which point the amp is clipping and the oscillation looks more like a square wave than a sine. That allowed me to measure the slew rate of the amp : about 0.5V / us ... any good ?
Then if I keep increasing the volume, frequency of the oscillation is now starting to INCREASE again.
Now I understand that any amplifier by nature can oscillate. Maybe it does so because the 1Mohm load of the scope probes is way too high compared to what its designed to drive, obviously. However as I said, from what I can see on the schematics, and from I witness/hear : the relay disconnects the speakers from the power amp output when you insert the headphone jack so.... how come I get ANY signal at all on the speaker output ?! .....
Of course the easy answer would be : "Vince, what do you care, you are not even going to be using the headphone output (indeed it's not likely) ! ".
But obviously I would rather try to understand what's going on and learn something along the way... otherwise not much fun eh....
Given that the headphone output used to work fine when I first tested the amp, it's reasonable to think that I caused the problem. All I did was to disconnect the flat flex cable that links the front panel to the main board, to spray some contact cleaner (some "Deoxit") into the connector.
It's supposed to help, not hurt...
Still, just in case, I inserted a piece of white paper into the connector and "wiped" its inside, several times, to remove excess cleaner.
Did not change anything. Waited 24 hours to let it dry or whatever contact cleaner does, tried again today.. still zero change.
So not too sure that it's the problem... Plus, again, balance control works just fine as soon as you switch from headphone at the front, to the speaker outputs at the back.
So I need to find an explanation that takes this fact into account ! It's not like the sound and balance controls were defective all the time... they misbehave ONLY when using the headphone output ! Any clue ?
Looking at the schematic (attached), it's hard to follow the mess of "wires" in there, but it looks like the headphone jack is connected to two paths (I highlighted them in blue and yellow, one color per channel) :
- Goes to a "network" of discrete passive components, all intertwined, that handle all the sound "processing" features : treble, bass, loudness, and the balance and main volume control. The STK power amp does nothing but amplify with a fixed gain it seems, it doesn't modify the signal in any other way.
- it also goes straight to the output of the STK power amp chip ?! So.. unlike what I assumed at the very beginning of the repair, the power amp DOES seem to drive even the headphone jack in the end...
Then let's look at what happens when I insert the headphone jack : the socket connects two pins together, highlighted in blue and red. From what I understand, it goes like this : chip IC601 , a uPC1237HA, monitors the two outputs sof the power amp, and if it thinks that something is fishy, it protects the power amp and speakers, by operating the relay to disconnect the speakers. One side of the relay is tied to a positive supply, and the other side goes through the contacts on the headphones socket, then back to pin 6 of that "protector" chip as it's labeled on the schematic. Looking at the data sheet of that chip, and although it's not explicitly noted anywhere, it's most likely just an open collector output. The contacts on the headphone socket are normally closed so that in normal operation, they don't interfere with the protector chip, and it can operate the relay as it sees fit. Then, when you plug in the headphones, it forces the relay to open no matter what.
So... here I am trying to make sense of all that...
Problem kicks in when I plug the headphones. All that it does is basically cut power to the relay coil so that it opens up its contacts and disconnects the loudspeakers. That's it. Nothing more. How is that supposed to cause my problems ? How the hell can the act of powering off the relay... cause havoc with the balance control, and how the sound... "sounds". Weird. As far as I can see, the headphones are driven directly by the amp, the path is uninterrupted. Looks like the headphones are ALWAYS fed by the power amp, no matter what, and that it's only the loudspeakers that get turned on and off by the relay. So even if the relay was dodgy, how could it affect the sound that goes to the headphones, since the relay contacts are DOWN stream of the headphones.
I am... puzzled....
Still, the fact that I can see the speaker output oscillate when the headphones are plugged in even though the relay is supposed to disconnect the speaker output is... rather strange to say the least. So I guess I should hang on to that cold undeniable fact, and start from there ?!...
So I could try removing the relay altogether, see what that does...
2)
Problem #2 : in the absence of an input signal, it I turn the volume up, then from as low as 20%, I can hear a loud "buzz", monotone sound, maybe the thing referred to as "hum" ? Don't know, maybe. Then, superimposed on this, there is also a less powerful but very distinct "random" crackling noise ? White noise ? I hear talking about "static" sometimes, maybe that could be it ? Either way, I fear it would be a problem when I get round to connecting loudspeakers and need to pump up the volume to 20% or more. So again I would like to understand where these two noises come from and how to fix them.
The main humming noise, IIRC that could be excessive 100Hz ripple from tired filter caps in the power supply somewhere ? I guess I could easily probe for that, see how much ripple I get on the main power rails.
As for the static, don't know.... bad connection somewhere ? bad solder joint or dying electrolytic somewhere ? There are 34 of them on the board... might be quite a challenge to figure out which one(s) is at fault... any particular method to quickly find the faulty cap, if cap it is ?
3) Problem #3 : well not really that big a problem, but I noticed something "funny" : while I am listening to the CD player, if I then switch to another input, say Tuner or whatever, then I can STILL here the music from the CD player ! LOL Well of course it's very faint, but the lab is quiet and if you pay attention, you can hear the music. So there is some cross talk shall we say ! Now I don't know how much of it is tolerable / within spec, or if here too something is wrong and I ought to find where that cross talk comes from ? Tired electrolytic caps again, me thinks !
OK, so that's it for now... hoping some kind soul might look at the schematics, my story, and offer some insight... any help or advise appreciated, as always...
In the meantime, will keep working on the thing and post updates as I go...