Rocinante said:I realized I hadnt posted any pics of this awesome project.
Thanks Martin I use it all the time.
Would you be able to post some larger images? I'm interested to see your layout in a 1RU enclosure.
Thanks! Paul
Rocinante said:I realized I hadnt posted any pics of this awesome project.
Thanks Martin I use it all the time.
Junction said:I am sure the answer is in these 103 pages somewhere, but does someone have the dimensions of the PCB?
Thanks
tomnowell said:First off, I want to say a big thank you to Martin! - this has been not only hugely enlightening and encouraging as a first DIY Audio project, it has been a whole lot of fun and will get a whole lot of use!!
And thank you to everyone who has contributed advice, information and help - you've all helped me a lot already .
I am a little bit stuck however, I finally got around to completing my first EZ1290 a week or so ago, and turned it on and it worked like that!, or so I thought, I was pretty happy with the sound, though I wasn't sure about it when trying to drive the pre-amp a little more.
I only have a DMM so I initially biased to 22.66v on the Collector of the 2N3055 however after doing a few recordings and analysing the waveforms it really looks as though my unit clips much earlier on one side of the waveform than the other. I have hooked up a crude signal generator from my iPad through the preamp and into my AD and analysed the sign wave with SignalScope which confirmed that the clipping is asymmetrical. So I tried turning the trimmer but couldn't get the clipping even close, I kept the signal as cold as I could to induce clipping and Im sure it was the preamp and not my AD that was clipping the signal. I have tested all my transistors and they pretty much on the money (I used BC550cs instead of BC184c), Im pretty sure my grounding is good, no crackles, cut-outs or hums.
Any suggestions? I know there were a couple of guys a while back with a similar problem, but I couldn't find the resolution except that perhaps their input signals were too hot.
Am I just using the wrong equipment? I don't have a scope but I might pick up an old analogue one if it would really help?
I noticed the trim-pot is labelled as logarithmic on the schematic and its quite possible I put a linear one in there, Would still be able to achieve correct bias?
Cheers,
Tom
Enchilada said:Hey guys,
Has anyone had any issues with the low end with the Ez1290? I've followed the BOM, ordering polystyrene capacitors, my transistors came from eBay and i'm using the Carnhill transformers. Just double checked my polarities and components and everything is A-OK. I'm using a JLM power plant and the voltages are bang on 24V and 48V for phantom power.
I don't have a scope so I adjusted the 5K trimmer until the 2N3055 transistor case measured 22.66V.
I tested it with a Neumann U89i and I could immediately hear there was no low end at all. I tried running a 100Hz and a 40Hz wave from my Tascam M-3700 console into it. The 100Hz was barely audible and the 40Hz was totally inaudible. Tried a different pre just to be sure and it's definitely an issue with the EZ1290.
Checked all my transistor voltages and they're pretty close to the ones specified in the build guide.
Any ideas of what to check for next before I try replacing all of my polystyrene caps with polypropylene?
Thanks,
Kris
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