The LED circuit is very simple. It consists of R1 on the main PCB (from gold finger pin-1 to R1 to J1-1), onto the switch PCB also J1-1, SW1 shorts out the LED when disengaged, when engaged the LED is connected to -16V thru J1-3 on both boards.Hi all!
I just finished this build. It's my first from CAPI. I am however having a few issues. I sent an email to Jeff after I finished the build regarding the issues, but I have come to some better conclusions after tests the next day.
I initially thought the unit was not receiving power because the red LED was not illuminated when the switch was engaged. I thought I had the polarity wrong so I flipped it around just for testing and it still didn't illuminate. My next thought process was the switch had a short or cold joint. I couldn't see any noticeable shorts or cold joints. I didn't feel like desoldering the 90-degree header on the switch PCB to check further, so I just looked through the small gap to examine the joints. I checked the LED outside of the circuit and it illuminated so that rules out a bad LED. I'm not really sure where to check next.
Next issue, probably the biggest is a constant static noise when the unit is plugged in. I noticed that when I touch some of the knobs the static noise is amplified. I feel as if there is a short to ground somewhere. I've checked for shorts, but can't seem to find any. I've been constantly cleaning up joints and removing excess solder, but haven't seemed to hit the right joint yet.
With some small bits of testing I think the unit works, I tried a few boosts/cuts with the mid band and it seemed to work fine, just that annoying static noise. I'm not sure if this will help at all, but I was slightly sloppy on a single joint and got a thin layer of solder on the J3-14 contact and have not been able to remove it. I really hope this is not the cause. I'm going to be doing some testing in the meantime as I have some other ideas of things to test, but I'm hoping someone with a better background in electronics can maybe point my troubleshooting in the right direction.
Thank you!
As for the noise, what opamps are they and who built them? Have they been tested and verified elsewhere?