Apogee da16x SMPS noise/whining

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lauritz

Well-known member
GDIY Supporter
Joined
Jan 31, 2015
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81
Location
Gadevang, Denmark
I just replaced the electrolytics in the SMPS of my Apogee DA16x converter. All works fine, but after warming up the converter now makes a whining noise (around 4500 Hz) too loud to be ignored, since the converters are in my small control room close by the mixer and workspace. It did'nt do it before, but the biggest cap was starting to bulge and I thought that I would just replace all 3 caps at once. The noise is specifically coming from the inductor (see picture - red laquored thread standing next to the 2 electrolytics ) and i've tried to put some glue on it and some other white elastic goop too, but it does'nt seem to do the job. It was also glued to the neighboring electrolytic before i started messing with it.

Does anybody have a hint as how to get rid of the noise? It's very annoying :)

all the best
Lauritz
 

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Last edited:
I'm guessing you replaced whatever caps with equivalent specced ones (esr, etc.)? It was quiet before recapping??
Thanks. I put in some decent quality capacitors, but did not actually check the ESR value...just capacitance, temperature and voltage. So maybe that could be the problem...i'll have another look at the ones i pulled out later today, To see the specifications. :)
 
Last edited:
I'm guessing you replaced whatever caps with equivalent specced ones (esr, etc.)? It was quiet before recapping??
Problem seems to be solved....switched the 2 two smaller caps back to the ones i pulled out - they connect directly with the coil. I looked them up and they are indeed ultra low ESR capacitors. The ones i put in are also low, lower ESR than i can measure with my multifunction meter (below 0.01 ohms), but apparently not low enough.

Left the big capacitor in, which was the bad looking one in the first place. It's sitting right where the 250 AC enters and does'nt seem to cause any trouble.

Lesson learned on ESR! :) Thanks much for the input. Very happy not listening to that 4500 Hz squeel.
 
I looked them up and they are indeed ultra low ESR capacitors.

If you go TOO low with the ESR of the new ones, that can throw the feedback / compensation network out of whack, leading to such instabilities. "Too much of a good thing", if you will...
 

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