How to repair a dead Integrated home audio amplifier step by step
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- Опубликовано: 1 авг 2024
- Another Realistic SA-1000 amplifier in need of repair. This one came to the shop missing the fuse. Owner stated that the power transformer was defective. Turns out to be shorted final outputs and old crusty electrolytic caps. After a few moments of magical performance, the amp sprang back to life. Yes, these amps may not be an audiophiles delight, however they deliver a beautiful pure tone. Great for listening to your classic vinyl LP collection. I love working on these amps for their simple construction. Very rewarding to see them sing again! Hope you like.
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I really appreciate this content. Unfortunately this is way beyond my understanding and ability. Trying to find someone like you that has the slightest interest in repairing the old stuff let alone making it cost effective leaves most of us with few alternatives. Much appreciated, entertaining too
James Meliti; feel free to review. This is a perfect example/explanation of "basic" electronics. Believe Me when I say "there are very complicated units out there".
I have so much fun watching your repairs. Comments are fantastic, it's like reading the pages of a magazine. I learn a lot with the vintage HiFi. And they are beautiful also. No plastic. Amazing.
Wow ! Nice going with the very detailed step by step diagnosis and repair of the stereo amp. Your attention to detail is impressive. You are definitely a pro at this high skill electronic repair. Thanks for sharing this quality demonstration for others to learn from and enjoy on RUclips.
WOW! What a fantastic channel. Incredible, detailed, work. Talk about going the extra mile. I have six, 70s-80s-era solid state amps and they each need a little bit of help. Thank you so much.
Absolutely hooked on these how to identify problem solve and repair audio equipment, and going about it the correct way by being safe and showing what test gear is needed
also check out Mr Carlsons lab
Time and patience is what shown here and very professional 👍
I appreciate people like you sharing your knowledge. It is so rare to find anyone that can repair solid state electronics, I've resorted to working on my own. Thanks for your help in turning an industrial controls guy into a 1/4 funtioning solid state repairman. I've got a Sansui G8000 I want to hear before 2 years... I may kick the bucket before then .
Another "save" in the column!! Wish I had the benefit of this knowledge 10 years ago. I bought a Sony receiver/amp in 1980 when I was 18. A very good unit. It finally bugged out on me & all the options to repair it were so obscenely expensive at the time. It met the trash heap.I still look for something close to replace it with. Thanks, Terry!!!
Hi Terry, thanks for sharing your vast knowledge!
tha't's got to be the neatest test bench I've ever seen. a real professional at work.
Lol I have burn holes everywere on my matt lol don't beer and solder
I have one of those silicon mats it's safe to drop solder on it, won't burn it.
Nice repair. May be better than ever with all of those new, modern capacitors.
Good catch on the diodes. Also, very good point on checking further into the driver circuit. I’ve repaired a couple of amps that had collateral damage like that.
You sir are very informative as well as entertaining!!!!!
In addition to a variac, my grandfather taught me to use a 200w light bulb wired in series with an outlet. A short in the unit on the bench wont blow fuses or "let the smoke out"... it just lights the bulb.
Thanks for the variac suggestion
Very good repair and instructions. Thanks for posting this Terry.
Excellent!! Thanks for your shared precise knowledge!
Way back in time, I had a customer bring in an amp where they had tried 4 or 5 fuses to "fix" an amp. By the time they had finished there where blown transistors all the way back to the pre-amp / driver stages.
That job was _fun_
Cheers,
Very helpful info, especially about checking the power supply diodes. I might have had to learn about that one the hard way. Nice sounding little amp.
Beautiful bringing the devices into life again, this is an art.
I love watching your videos, I have absolutely no clue what you’re talking about because I am not that technical but for some reason I just like to learn. Not like I will ever use this information but it’s just fun to watch. I like watching you get in there and soldering putting components into boards. The grunt work you know what I mean
Very cool, D-lab. Moment I saw the burned resistor, I thought exactly all like you. Thanks for taking it home in the video.
Thanks, I enjoyed watching you at work.
Well done. I'm trying to learn basic electronics; theory is one thing... but there's nothing more instructive than watching an expert fix broke stuff.
I like Mr. D-lab's attitude and presentation style.
I'm glad to see you tested all of the transistors. I've seen many shorted driver transistors take out the finals
Absolutely fantastic, great humour and solid use able content. I took notes and learned so much! Thank you, I'll be checking out your other vids. 👍
Instead of variac, You can use a cool life-hack. Around '80 in Poland, transistors were extremly expencive and hard to get, so You can replace main fuse with light bulb socket, and 100w incandescent bulb, power on, and if bulb just flashed and then glowed a bit, there was no short, but if it was still bright glowing, there was a short. And transistors was saved without nearly unoptainable variac.
Thanks for this suggestion. The light turns on momentarily bright then dims to about 1/2 intensity.
I must add that if the light bulb stays on even at low intensity there is still a problem on the board. I disconnected the left channel output power board because something was burning. When I did my second test without the defective board, the light stays off. Now I will continue and troubleshoot this defective board.
We've used this for vintage tube radios - when they were new, lol! Great tip. Some make a box with a bulb socket, power cord, and receptacle to plug in the device to be tested. NOTE this ONLY works with incandescent bulbs! Do not use LED bulbs!
@@markanderson8066 Shango066 uses this approach too, and yes, incandescent bulbs is mandatory because they act as high power resistors with soft current limiting due to filament temperature characteristics.
I used that technique, soldering a 75W incandescent light globe to two insulated wires, and putting it across a blown fuse. I called it an 'economical PTC thermistor'. (PTC - Positive Temperature Co-efficient (of resistance)).
Thanks Terry! Nice work!
Yeeeehhh man Realistic is live one more time!!!!!
Good repair Tery!
Great video Terry. You put a lot of work into these!
Wow this a clean looking and laid out unit , My Fisher TX500 receiver is full of wires soldered everywhere.
Well done! I bought a used Marantz 1030 in the seventies... loved it!
Great job. Like that you accept the challenges!!
I was doing Amp repair back in the day
we were quite busy at times
surprised that quite alot of people looking at these repair vids these days
Nice video as usual! Thanks for sharing!
An enjoyable watch. Thanks for posting.
I've been watching various vintage electronic repair channels for 4+ years now and only now have I been recommended this video. I love you style and attitude. You aren't grumpy or preachy like some of the older repair guys and seem to be all about having fun. That's what it's all about in the end isn't it? If you aren't having fun then why are you into this hobby? I quit drinking over a year ago (not that I had a problem per se, but it really wasn't benefiting my life in an appreciable way), but seeing you enjoying a glass of wine really sold me. It really conveys the laid back nature of your channel and earned you a new subscriber. The alien skit pushed it over the top and I'm gonna head right to your patreon page and throw some money into your wine and cracker budget. Hopefully it's enough so you can afford to upgrade to a wine, cracker and cheese budget. If you prefer an aged hard cheese or a young runny variety you can't go wrong with a nice manchego or brie, respectively.
Happy comments, totally agreed!
@@georgecrosscross8253 glad you replied after a year. lol. I think I was never recommended another of your videos even though I subbed and I completely forgot about it until now.
Excellent video Terry
Love all the comments and experience you bring to the channel . I am glad to see the transistor amps and recievers ..
Dang! Really blew a lot of stuff on that one. Good thing it was sent to you to repair! Changing those caps was a very wise thing to do. Keep up the excellent work Professor!
Nice repair, very thorough. I know what you mean about using generic replacement transistors, sometimes they don't work properly, I've experienced that in the past. It is best to use exact replacements whenever possible.
Thank you for getting me started.
Very good troubleshooting step by step!
Learning so much and your explanations are really lucid. Thank you
I loved this video-very informative, funny as well. Great job!
Sounds good! Nice to see some solid state audio here, most electronics are tube oriented.
You are great Terry. Thank you very much for this informative video!
Another cool repair video from
D-Lab Electronics
Very detailed explanations. Great video!
Great video.
Very informative.
Looking forward to more.
Thank you for doing this!
The 70's and 80's amps are super but man, the 70's and 80's guitar notes......just awesome!
PS:- Electronic repair instruction wasn't too bad either.
They are really good sounding amplifiers.
Amazing repair.
Great Video Terry!!
this is awesome info. i wish i'd watched this before jumping straight into swapping my main transistor pair. i didn't realize it was fine to check for component shorts with the components still soldered onto the board. thanks again
Brilliant! I enjoyed that - tools for the job!
this is SOOO great! thanks much for posting, great info.
I checked the dictionary for the word ''professional'' and I saw your picture.
Cool to see a solid state repair. It makes sense that the caps work just like a tube amp, but I'd never seen one described like that. Thanks for bringing us along on this one.
I have to say much thanks for your repair videos, one of the best if not the best.
Nice one Terry. I actually thought you were playing The Who’s - Behind Blue Eyes in the test. I love these 70’s and 80’s amps. Appreciate all your tips
Sounded like Emerson, Lake, and Palmer to me. I need one of those royalty-free CDs.
That was great. I'm new to this and it was very well explained. Thanks
Thank you Terry !
I broke down and bought myself a vacuum desoldering gun on sale a while back, it wasn't cheap but it saves a ton of time replacing parts on these old units.
clean and perfect work
Wow I have an old JVC boombox (RV-NB20B). This was my outside source of music for more than 10 years. I loved it and bragged about how tough it was and how good it sounded. It quit working about 7 years ago. When I turn it on, the red power light comes on for a second and then there is a static pop from the speakers, and it shuts down. I have kept it with me always hoping I would come across a proper electrician who could fix it. I wish your were close by. I bet you could fix it. I'm old enough to remember when most towns had a shop where you could bring your electronics to be repaired. Now-a-days folks just throw the unit out and get another one.
Hi teacher very very nice interesting, your age same my father I love it & I love your video too I got more technic in trouble shooting amps,but don't forget your wine really refresh your mind, thank you for the video too. More power & God bless.
You are the best repair electronic engineer. I was the hobbiest electronic person.
Thanks for all the repair/troubleshooting detail. That was really helpful. I learned a lot.
I've got a Pioneer VSX-920 Audio Video amplifier from 2010 that has issues. A neighbor was going to throw it out. Hopefully, I can solve the DC 003 error code problem and get it going again.
Regards, Tom
Probably already done it by now, but any electronics made in Asia between 2005-2007 (basically everything) is likely to have classic "cap cooties" issue. The Asian cap manufacturers got a bad recipe for electrolytic that lowered the life of the caps they made. Millions of them. Whenever you see a TV or monitor from that era that powers on for 5 seconds and shuts off, it's those caps. $10 fix in parts.
Very nice Sr Terry, thanks i like your job, i'm study audio amplifier.
Great choice realistic are way undervalued. 👌. Thank you very much for your knowledge 🙏
Good troubleshooting info in this video. Good job.
Great video, thank you!
Very efficient repair!
Extremely good job. Congrats Sir.👏👏👏👌👌👌
Outstanding video.
I should have been doing this my entire life! Now I'm at the end and not enough time to get back in it! Good job!
Very nice job.
My new fav channel! Glad I found it.
Good fix great sound
Thank you for such a comprehensive and clear explanation. And kudos for the mini movie troll abduction.
Thank you for producing this video! ! Love it. I am learning to be a sound tech repair.
i have no idea what you are talking about or doing but i still find it very fascinating.!!!! 👍
Very educational fun. Thanks!
This was a great and very detailed video.
thanks for a very professional job. guys like you are hard to find. keep up the good work
Boy, you were lucky. I don't think I've ever gone thru an integrated amp of that era with blown outputs that didn't also take out the phase splitter or driver transistors.
And used an out of manufacture STK module!
I'm trying to fix up my Sansui Au-717.. this helped a lot!
its a beautiful work, thank you for the update, Warm Regards from Australia
Pretty cool way to understand fundamentals
Great work! - amps/tuners/decks etc ... can be a nightmare to fix, one issues leads on to another etc.
Excellent video my good man.
thanks for sharing your knowledge i appreciate a good teacher also like how you dealt with the troll.
Good work D labby
!
Initialy i wanted to learn whats wrong with my older amp, which is way newer then this one. Stayed for the great content! Subbed!
Very much informative... learnt a lot.. thanks..
Thanks so much for the lesson ......
Your technical knowledge is inversely proportional to your sense of humor. Stick to what you're good at. ;-)
Thanks for the tips. I wish you all the best.
Good video.
One extra step that I usually do. But you need a 2 channel scope for this. Juxtapose the 2 channels over each other and check the bias. Sometimes it is needed to tweak a little bit to make sure they are the same.
Great Job.
Love your channel came here from
Amp Repair Guy channel