YAMAHA Ne80200 Opamp crackling noise repair, Schematicand pcb available

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Sep 21, 2018
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Hi from Argentina, im working on an two channel YAMAHA Pm2000 rack, from channels strips of the original board.
So i was having noise crackling in both channels, and when the gain rotary switch bypass the NE80200 at -20db, the noise it goes, so im assuming that this OPAMP its faulty or noisy.
So i take one and degooped it (its no that hard because is silicon no epoxy), and make the photos, and clon version in express pcb, also a not so good schematic, i think its correct, but im lacking some technical abilities to find out where to start, to maybe resolve the crackling issue.
Y see four diodes and they have no markings, only a number 1, maybe they are simply 4148, doubt about they been zeners of some type.
So im posting the info in case of the curiosity of someone and also asking what can be changed to fix the opamp, or what can check first maybe.
What i already done is, the solder was brittle and old so i reflow everything.
IMG_20250204_121132586_HDR.jpgIMG_20250131_164114167_MP (1).jpgIMG_20250204_115609043_MP.jpgIMG_20250204_123546964_MP.jpgThanks i hope the pictures can be the help for someone else.
 
Just FYI, Yamaha switched to the silicone potting, from epoxy, sometime around the early-mid 1980's. At the time I heard that this was due to the epoxy potted ones being prone to failure. This was either proven to be, or suspected of, being caused by the epoxy being too inflexible...especially in regard to thermal changes.
I had about a 1/2 dozen of these fail on me between 1979 and the mid-80's on a few different PM-700's and 2000's.
One of them failed after a performance, while I was leaning on the desk talking to a colleague. I heard the fuse resistors go with a "snap!".
 
Just FYI, Yamaha switched to the silicone potting, from epoxy, sometime around the early-mid 1980's. At the time I heard that this was due to the epoxy potted ones being prone to failure. This was either proven to be, or suspected of, being caused by the epoxy being too inflexible...especially in regard to thermal changes.
I had about a 1/2 dozen of these fail on me between 1979 and the mid-80's on a few different PM-700's and 2000's.
One of them failed after a performance, while I was leaning on the desk talking to a colleague. I heard the fuse resistors go with a "snap!".
This board was old but not that much, 80's, the previous owner was a very huge band here in Latin America, soda stereo.
It was the board for live gigs, so I assume that the temperature aspect of failure was there, but also the moving aspect, constant vibrations and transportation one country to the other.
 
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