"It went on to say how you could change the gain on the boards by changing the value of one resistor."
Could you point me to where this is mentioned. I did make them myself. I'll post some photos when I get a chance as they are great bits of kit. What you say makes sense. I built these amps using a kit and following instructions so I am not an electrical guru by any means.
If you can send on that link I will see about isolating that resistor and replacing it on the board, and if that is a bit fiddly I can do what you say on the input.
Thanks again,
Nathan
PS: I hear plenty of folks use the preamp I have with Quad 405s to great effect. If our theory is correct and it is the levels of gain that is causing a problem that would point to the Quads having a very low, or lower, gain. I must see about digging up their specs.
Fran wrote:Put 100k in series with the hot, and then put one end of the 10k just after the 100k, with the other end of it to ground. You could do it all right on the input jack.
I'm saying this because I'm thinking you bought the kits and assembled yourself - if not do you have anyone near you who could solder them in without wrecking the amp?
Doesn't have to be exactly 100k and 10k either - probably the series one in the range 50-150K and the shunt from 5 to 30k would do AOK.
I went off and had a look at the LM3886. I didn't find the manual etc for your exact one, but did find one for another set of boards (the BrianGT ones also on chipamp.com - http://chipamp.com/docs/lm3886-manual.pdf). As they are all reasonably similar, the specs are undoubtedly similar. Anyway, it gives the gain on it as 35dB - a massive amount, and clearly meant to be made as an integrated or with a passive pre. It went on to say how you could change the gain on the boards by changing the value of one resistor.
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Lads - very funny!!
Fran