ask your guy to swap the left and right opamps and see if the problems moves with it. if yes, one or more opamps is dead on that side, if not, problem is somewhere else
Note that the PA5 II is a newer model than the original PA5. Changes were made to mitigate the reliability problems in the original and, although it’s early days, there have not been any significant reliability problems reported in the PA5 II to date.I am on the fence with this Amplifier. (PA5 II)
Having read the many problems with the potting compound due to what seems to be heat. I believe I read here that the volume pot can be bypassed, which would be a working solution for me as I like to use it in combo with an E30 DAC and user its volume control.
Is there something else to do about the heat to make it more reliable?
TPA3255/3251 are 4 channel amplifier ICs. You can also operate these as 2 channel (btl) or mono (pbtl). Inputs and outputs must be configured for this.From the reverse engineering, is it a composite amplifier? And actually four of them because there are two channels and they are balanced?
TPA3255/3251 are 4 channel amplifier ICs. You can also operate these as 2 channel (btl) or mono (pbtl). Inputs and outputs must be configured for this.
You can only operate the PA5 as a 2-channel amplifier.
Of course, the inputs/input buffers on the TPA3255/3251 must be configured to match the outputs.The buffer has, per se, nothing to do with the configuration of the TPA3251/55. It is quite agnostic. If I can follow its circuit properly, it takes the inputs of two channels (which can be RCA or balanced), creates a balanced signal per channel, and then you use these to drive the next stage. In particular, for a TPA3251/55 you can use them to drive the channels pair-wise as hot+cold, so you get balanced outs for the speakers.
The really sad thing (as the OP to this thread shows) the IP obfuscation can be circumvented by one guy working alone in a few hours. How long did it take their competitors do you think?
Topping near massacred their own reputation for absolutely no benefit whatsoever.
50V ceramic smd capacitors, the most common type. you only go 25v or lower if you need more capacity .. like 10uF or more. not needed here.My PA5's left channel has gone quiet after 14 months of use. I can try going for Topping's 2 year warranty but honestly that is too much trouble when they are replacing the defective potted module with another potted module which will go bad again. And I will have to pay for shipping.
So, going to try the gamerpaddy replacement board. I can only get the PCB manufactured and then will have to solder the components myself. I have very basic soldering experience. So, few questions. Would greatly appreciate if anyone could help:
- The capacitors are 50v or any other voltage?
- I can use 4 OPA1612AID, right? Or do I need, 2 NE5532DR and 2 OPA1612AID?