Yeah, BITD they always seemed on the same playing field as NAD. Not super class but good value.
As for the root cause of the blown diode, here is the long answer:
I was a bit of a HiFI nerd years ago and while I studied Electronics I'm very rusty and forgot a lot, plus I
sold all my test equipment years ago. Using only a Lidl soldering iron and multi-meter at the moment! Managed to download
the circuit diagram which was a massive help. From the audio fault I zoomed into the problem area
fairly (and surprisingly) quick. On the PCB there is some black gooey stuff around a cap (but it may actually be
glue to keep the fairly large caps in place....?). The cap is to help stabilise the reference voltage on the base of the
power supply transistor for the two op-amps in the pre-amp stage. The voltage is -18v, but the cap is only rated at 25v. So I've ordered some 35v caps and will replace both for the -ve and +ve rails at the same time. I'll stick with the ½W zeners first and
see if they pop.
While there is 'separate' L + R power rails for both the main amp and pre-amp, oddly the reference voltages are taken from only the L channel power. I'm suspecting a leaky cap and/or high voltage transient "on-off" spike blew the zener; there is no 'spike' protection capacitor across it. Could also be down to age or over heating. The rest of the circuits seem all good; no internal
fuses blown - I'm confident it will be working fine.
In all honesty a good upgrade would be to modernise the whole pre-amp power supply with it's own
transformer and regulators, and possibly swap out the op-amps for something more recent.
I'm kind of enjoying the trip down memory lane fiddling with amps - especially with those that
would have been well over budget BITD!
As for the root cause of the blown diode, here is the long answer:
I was a bit of a HiFI nerd years ago and while I studied Electronics I'm very rusty and forgot a lot, plus I
sold all my test equipment years ago. Using only a Lidl soldering iron and multi-meter at the moment! Managed to download
the circuit diagram which was a massive help. From the audio fault I zoomed into the problem area
fairly (and surprisingly) quick. On the PCB there is some black gooey stuff around a cap (but it may actually be
glue to keep the fairly large caps in place....?). The cap is to help stabilise the reference voltage on the base of the
power supply transistor for the two op-amps in the pre-amp stage. The voltage is -18v, but the cap is only rated at 25v. So I've ordered some 35v caps and will replace both for the -ve and +ve rails at the same time. I'll stick with the ½W zeners first and
see if they pop.
While there is 'separate' L + R power rails for both the main amp and pre-amp, oddly the reference voltages are taken from only the L channel power. I'm suspecting a leaky cap and/or high voltage transient "on-off" spike blew the zener; there is no 'spike' protection capacitor across it. Could also be down to age or over heating. The rest of the circuits seem all good; no internal
fuses blown - I'm confident it will be working fine.
In all honesty a good upgrade would be to modernise the whole pre-amp power supply with it's own
transformer and regulators, and possibly swap out the op-amps for something more recent.
I'm kind of enjoying the trip down memory lane fiddling with amps - especially with those that
would have been well over budget BITD!