Eh...what just happened?
Posted: Mon May 27, 2013 7:48 pm
Short version:
Flash of light out of the corner of my eye and an unholy pop through the speaker. No visible damage to anything. I'm a bit traumatised.
Long version:
In recent weeks, one amp was creating popping and crackling sounds through the speaker as it warmed up. The associated driver excursion was mildly worrying, so it was on my list of things to get sorted. I thought changing all the old input valves might fix it but the problem persisted, so it was either output valves (just over a year old) or, as seems to be a problem with these amps due to the ridiculous heat the valves generate, the caps.
This evening, I was turning on everything after a week away, and just after I switched the power amps on I remembered I now own a preamp too. I turned off the power amps (maybe 30 seconds after switch on, not ideal, I know I know) and very soon afterwards I powered up the pre (again I know, a bit impatient definitely). As I switched on the pre or very soon afterwards, I saw a flash of light out of the corner of my eye from the direction of the left amp/area and heard a massive pop through the left speaker. I turned off the pre (and everything else at that stage) and went to assess the damage. Thing is, I can't see any. All valves look normal --I haven't taken them out yet, but there's no obvious discolouration or anything -- and the Kharma ceramic driver is, as far as I can tell, also intact. They're notorious for turning into expensive dust, so at least that hasn't happened.
Having disconnected everything, I decided I'd switch the amp on again to see if I could at least identify a faulty valve. They are all glowing normally from what I can tell, although I'm not connecting the speakers to find out if the amp is still working. When they cool I'll take the valves out for a closer look, but for now there's nothing obvious. I didn't see any smoke, there's no smell of burning, the curtains remain flame-free.
What's happened here? Can a cap fail spectacularly in this way? Obviously the amps will be going to Cloney/Bernard for examination and possible surgery, but would anyone like to speculate what I might be facing? I've certainly read online about front cap replacement being necessary every so often due to their proximity to the insanely hot 6C33C valves, and early failure due to this heat. I've no idea what that might cost, or whether they're likely to have taken out something else on the way.
Gah, I could really do without this.
Flash of light out of the corner of my eye and an unholy pop through the speaker. No visible damage to anything. I'm a bit traumatised.
Long version:
In recent weeks, one amp was creating popping and crackling sounds through the speaker as it warmed up. The associated driver excursion was mildly worrying, so it was on my list of things to get sorted. I thought changing all the old input valves might fix it but the problem persisted, so it was either output valves (just over a year old) or, as seems to be a problem with these amps due to the ridiculous heat the valves generate, the caps.
This evening, I was turning on everything after a week away, and just after I switched the power amps on I remembered I now own a preamp too. I turned off the power amps (maybe 30 seconds after switch on, not ideal, I know I know) and very soon afterwards I powered up the pre (again I know, a bit impatient definitely). As I switched on the pre or very soon afterwards, I saw a flash of light out of the corner of my eye from the direction of the left amp/area and heard a massive pop through the left speaker. I turned off the pre (and everything else at that stage) and went to assess the damage. Thing is, I can't see any. All valves look normal --I haven't taken them out yet, but there's no obvious discolouration or anything -- and the Kharma ceramic driver is, as far as I can tell, also intact. They're notorious for turning into expensive dust, so at least that hasn't happened.
Having disconnected everything, I decided I'd switch the amp on again to see if I could at least identify a faulty valve. They are all glowing normally from what I can tell, although I'm not connecting the speakers to find out if the amp is still working. When they cool I'll take the valves out for a closer look, but for now there's nothing obvious. I didn't see any smoke, there's no smell of burning, the curtains remain flame-free.
What's happened here? Can a cap fail spectacularly in this way? Obviously the amps will be going to Cloney/Bernard for examination and possible surgery, but would anyone like to speculate what I might be facing? I've certainly read online about front cap replacement being necessary every so often due to their proximity to the insanely hot 6C33C valves, and early failure due to this heat. I've no idea what that might cost, or whether they're likely to have taken out something else on the way.
Gah, I could really do without this.