I just built a pair of Alice OPA mics, using the stock boards ordered from PCBWay, the standard Jules Ryckebusch BOM and TSB2555B capsules in BM800 bodies. I triple-inspected every detail of the build during and after, and had meticulously removed every trace of visible flux residue immediately after populating and soldering the board.
When I connected them to my Focusrite Scarlett, one didn't work. A quick check showed that all the circuit voltages were extremely low, including the 48V coming from the Scarlett. With the mic unplugged, the voltage on pins 2 and 3 of the cable was back to a normal 47.7V. Uh oh, something's drawing waaay too much current. So, once I got the mic connected to my bench power supply, I saw that the circuit was drawing a whopping 34mA, instead of the expected <5mA. I replaced the OPA1642, and the circuit voltages tested pretty much perfect according to Jules' stated voltages.
VCC_1 =12.35V
VCC_2 = 11.52V
R8/R10/R11 Junction = 5.81V
Awesome, we're back in business, or so I thought! I plugged it into my Apollo and it worked great for few minutes, then silence. I checked the voltages, and they were again similar to the previous extremely low voltages. Back on the bench power supply, it was drawing the same 34mA of current! I don't know which amazed and dumbfounded me more, that it was somehow drawing that much current in the first place, that it had repeated itself, or that the OPA1624 didn't explode.
I examined and re-examined every millimeter of everything, and couldn't see anything wrong anywhere. I laid it aside and went back to playing with its functioning brother, which in a few minutes stopped sending audio as well. Guess what? Same symptoms.
After inspecting everything until my head hurt and my brain started shutting down, there are no shorts or mistakes anywhere in either mic that I can see, and well, the fact is the same thing has now happened three times on two different mics. A bad new opamp is rather rare anyway, but two and especially three is impossible, and certainly not by failing in the same way in mere minutes, when connected to two different interfaces. I very closely examined and traced a blank board from the same batch to ensure everything was correct, and it indeed seems to be. All the electrolytics are brand new Panasonic that I bought a few weeks ago from Mouser, not 20 year old caps dug out of my boxes of unused junk. The OPA1642s likewise came from Mouser, not eBay or Amazon.
I've successfully troubleshooted circuits of immensely greater complexity, and certainly this is waaay too simple of a circuit to defeat me that easily, or at least I thought it was... but, I'm perplexed. Any ideas?

When I connected them to my Focusrite Scarlett, one didn't work. A quick check showed that all the circuit voltages were extremely low, including the 48V coming from the Scarlett. With the mic unplugged, the voltage on pins 2 and 3 of the cable was back to a normal 47.7V. Uh oh, something's drawing waaay too much current. So, once I got the mic connected to my bench power supply, I saw that the circuit was drawing a whopping 34mA, instead of the expected <5mA. I replaced the OPA1642, and the circuit voltages tested pretty much perfect according to Jules' stated voltages.
VCC_1 =12.35V
VCC_2 = 11.52V
R8/R10/R11 Junction = 5.81V
Awesome, we're back in business, or so I thought! I plugged it into my Apollo and it worked great for few minutes, then silence. I checked the voltages, and they were again similar to the previous extremely low voltages. Back on the bench power supply, it was drawing the same 34mA of current! I don't know which amazed and dumbfounded me more, that it was somehow drawing that much current in the first place, that it had repeated itself, or that the OPA1624 didn't explode.
I examined and re-examined every millimeter of everything, and couldn't see anything wrong anywhere. I laid it aside and went back to playing with its functioning brother, which in a few minutes stopped sending audio as well. Guess what? Same symptoms.
After inspecting everything until my head hurt and my brain started shutting down, there are no shorts or mistakes anywhere in either mic that I can see, and well, the fact is the same thing has now happened three times on two different mics. A bad new opamp is rather rare anyway, but two and especially three is impossible, and certainly not by failing in the same way in mere minutes, when connected to two different interfaces. I very closely examined and traced a blank board from the same batch to ensure everything was correct, and it indeed seems to be. All the electrolytics are brand new Panasonic that I bought a few weeks ago from Mouser, not 20 year old caps dug out of my boxes of unused junk. The OPA1642s likewise came from Mouser, not eBay or Amazon.
I've successfully troubleshooted circuits of immensely greater complexity, and certainly this is waaay too simple of a circuit to defeat me that easily, or at least I thought it was... but, I'm perplexed. Any ideas?

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