Thursday, February 25, 2021

Dear Robots, Thank You.

I saw a bunch of folks put up posts about Daft Punk's announcement yesterday, and I had an immediate thought about that (especially with Touch as the music on the farewell video), but wanted to give an album a spin today with the intent of reflection and now feel like I have something to say.

I was late to the party, having been directed to the release in August, about three months after it came out. I never listened to Daft Punk intentionally, but the two lead radio singles, with Nile Rodgers providing the guitar tracks and Nathan East on bass convinced me I had to have a copy of the whole album. Somewhere within the first 25 minutes, I was awakened to the sound of post-disco and synth pop, or at least this particular blend. The album made the cut for my monthly listening for at least five years, and while it's dropped off some in rotation, it isn't because it wasn't influential to my taste in music. The most recent album that's fallen into this slot is Donny Benet's Mr Experience, from last year (with some crunchy fingerstyle StingRay work), which sounds delightfully 1983 to me. I can also trace the Cory Wong habit to this, and it is also the source of blame for the Zainichi Funk CDs I've ordered from Japan.
 
On the subject of the 1983 and the title Random Access Memories... I have few memory connections to my early and middle childhood, what with all the head trauma, with really just random events here and there to fall back on. In much the same way that the smell of hospital-grade cleaning supplies and medical-issue low-pile carpet used to send me into an actual panic, though, I guess the combination of strings, horns, and synthesizer really speaks to the sounds of the radio and shopping-trip background music I would have heard early on while growing up. Whether it can qualify as nostalgia, it sure seems like I had an immediate positive emotional reaction to the style. It also came into my orbit at a particularly important time in my adult life, and links me to a state of being I haven't been able to really get at since. Fresh out of the thyroidectomy but before I found out about the lymph nodes. Driving 'home' for the night after chowing down on a particularly nice pizza in Charleston, West Virginia, with Rogue's Dirtoir accompanying. Having a stable voice again and finally being at a certain stability with my thyroid replacement hormones. You know, the whole scene.
 
But all that wouldn't be anything to recommend to everyone if it weren't for the great performances. Nile Rodgers is a master of his craft and Nathan East is just such a smooth player, but the more I've listened to the work, the drumming, especially by Omar Hakim, is absolutely stellar. I think my favorite musical assembly is Touch, as I suggested earlier, but I love Contact and Giorgio By Moroder, and the string intro for Beyond is a fantastic opening salvo to the rest of the song. I can't really speak to how effective the lyrics are because of whatever my condition is, but they feel honest and it turned out I enjoy the sound of vocoders, at least on occasion. Even Julian Casablancas' guest spot on Instant Crush fits the style to a T. Plus the key change modulation in Within... I just can't get enough.
 
Anyway, if you haven't ever given it a spin, go find this on your listening destination of choice and give it a chance. I know a few of you are already on board, but still. This album was transformational to my listening habits.
 
Daft Punk wasn't an important part of my listening for years, and I still haven't given a deep dive to their other work, but this album was so important to me by itself that I'm thankful they did it. Thanks, robots: painters in my mind.

Reposted from Facebook. At least here, I have an expectation of low engagement.

Sunday, February 14, 2021

On Electronics Servicing, or: How I Saved $50 By Building Two Amplifiers And Buying Test Equipment

 


Back in August of 2014, my Ampeg SVT-3 Pro head had developed this strange scratchy sound that didn’t prevent playing to come through but was audible enough that it was annoying. I reached out to a local electronics repair shop that is an Ampeg authorized service center to ask for them to take a look at it, to avoid having to buy a replacement. For a $50 bench fee, they told me they wanted to reflow the solder on the input jack. Another $50 later, and I had an amplifier that was still doing the thing I took it to them to solve. I may be misremembering the conversation some, but my recollection is that, when I called them to let them know the work didn’t solve the problem, they told me it’d be another $50 diagnostic fee because the repair they did wasn’t at fault. I declined that service, partly because spending unforeseeable quantities of money on diagnosing a piece of equipment that, at the time, was 19 years old and was still available brand new from the company seemed dumb, but also because I knew they didn’t value my business. I don’t say that to disparage them, so much as to say that my first-time customer status combined with a mystery rinky dink problem that didn’t affect a moneymaking enterprise pretty understandable doesn’t rate with the only factory-authorized service center on the north side of DC for a lot of brands. Also, my sense of work ethic resented being given back something that was just as broken as it was when I took it there. Again, I get that they probably don’t have time to let something sit powered on for a few minutes to see what it does, but it still didn’t sit well with me.

 

It was around that time that I decided to build my first desktop computer. Electronics components have been compared to LEGO, so I think that’s where the itch started: selecting parts to work together to produce a coherent whole has been something I’ve enjoyed my whole life as far as I know, and by the time I had made it to 2016, I had started to lean more heavily into diagnostic and repair tasks. This was the year of the processor thefts from classrooms, and reading part numbers off processors, while not impressive in any meaningful way, isn’t really all that far removed from identifying ICs and diodes and so on. I also started to watch a youtube channel that specialized at the time in tearing down power tools, which started to show me a world of materials selection versus cost and was especially helpful in formulating strategies for identifying suspect components for failure based on environment, location, and device type. It was here that I built my first test component (an equivalent series resistance meter for measuring capacitor performance) and bought my first ‘good’ multimeter (a Chinese domestic market Fluke recommended for ‘hobbyist’ low voltage DC circuits, of the types that I found myself wanting to fix most often). Then came the Tektronix 317, a vacuum tube-driven oscilloscope that I knew would need some refresh work. That led to buying a $10 surplus Tektronix 465 from work, and then fixing them both with a Tek 2336 that I managed to convince myself to sell on after fixing its latches with a 3D printed part I learned software well enough to draw up the model for myself. At that point, I got myself a broken Ampeg PF-500 class D amplifier that was sold parts/as-is that I managed to resurrect by tracing the circuit back from the known-blown power transistors and identifying failed components, to include the class D driver IC, before deciding to build my own Fender 5F1 Champ clone amplifier. That turned into a commission for a second one, and before you knew it, I had built up enough skills and equipment to be able to turn my attention to this project that professionals decided not to take seriously. This was good, because in the intervening two years, the amplifier had also started to completely lose sound output periodically and intermittently, which seemed to be, in my opinion, “bad.”

 

I started with the obvious-to-me, by removing the circuit boards from the chassis and reflowing ALL of the solder joints. I figured “hey, this is what the professionals said would help!” It did not. I started to read over forum posts and, of course, the first thing everyone says is “replace the tubes!” That also did not do anything. Buying tubes is fun, though, so at least there was that. I started digging a little further, trying various combinations of search terms, when the first This Is A Major Issue With These Amplifiers came up: poor bias on the power output transistors due to changes in position or something of the biasing trim pot, a device that Ampeg’s parent company apparently decided to cheap out on when selecting parts.

 

That’s when I found out the original 1995 power mosfets were so poorly matched that one of them was barely on while one was near the top of the adjustment range. There was no way to get them to operate together at a bias level that was unlikely to create crossover distortion at low volume levels. This was when I learned about a couple of things: transistor biasing, and parts catalogs and datasheets. I ran through Mouser for output devices and ordered a testing device that let me attempt to match them at their turn-on voltages. I did a bunch of charting, selected the eight closest devices, and got to installing. Now the amp biases correctly! The voltages you’re supposed to measure to determine current flow are all within two millivolts instead of spreading over 23. The amp just sort of generally sounded and felt better at low volumes... and within a few weeks, I had my next cutout, which meant that my root problem was still with me.

 

By this time, I had developed a bit more experience with both high voltage tube circuits owing to my experience building the two Champs, and with using a schematic to do diagnostics. Using my digital oscilloscope revealed something I didn’t see with my analog scope, that the power board’s tube plate voltage circuit had weird periodic sag issues and a lot of noise. I went ahead and replaced the filter capacitors and the power transistor that regulates voltage in that part of the circuit, and lo and behold, now my tube gain knob seems to work the way it did when I started playing this amp back circa 2002. Cool, another tired transistor out and some fresh electrolytics, and I seem to have further smoothed out the sound. And then a week after that, another cutout.

 

At this point, having had a series of repair dramas with a bass guitar as well, I am close to saying “okay, one last go at this and then it’s on to class D. It won’t sound the same to me, but I can’t keep going like this.” I had figured out previously that the cutouts were only happening at low volume levels (I could shake a stage for an hour, but practice downstairs was a problem), I knew that it was more likely to happen with the tube drive knob below 12:00, and I knew it seemed to be more common when the amp and room were cold, but sometimes it could come up after a stretch of time playing without any problems. I also knew, because the amp has a line output, that the problem was at the very least on the very end of the preboard signal chain or somewhere on the power board.

 

I’m glad I gave it one more chance.

 

Deciding that this was going to take some serious elbow grease to get to the bottom of, I decided I needed to devote actual, significant sit-down time to this. I set up with a device that let me record from the speaker output, and found out that, yep, the problem is between preamp and power amp. Then I found a potential last stop on the pre board and decided to move my recording device to the preamp out/power amp in loop, which, if that were fine, would require the fault to be on the power board for certain. It was fine. So at this point, I take the power board back out and clean the contacts in those jacks - I was going to replace the jacks outright, but the modern parts are a slightly different physical package - because they use their bridging pins to route signal. Cleaning didn’t fix the issue despite THAT being a common forum suggestion, so onward with technology. This time around, I decided to scope it before and after every stage from the last 12AX7 tube on the preamp. No problems at all between points, so I’m at a total loss when not only does it keep happening, but it seems to have gotten worse. (Aside: I just realized that I had closed my vent a little bit so that we’d have more HVAC pressure into the upper floors. This reduction in temperature was almost certainly the cause of the worsening symptom, not anything internal or what I was doing.)

 

So the sound cuts out one more time and, out of some degree of frustration and a greater degree of lack of options, I do what everyone who has been working on the same problem for five years does: percussive maintenance. And what do you know? The sound cut back in.

 

Oh ho ho! I have an electromechanical issue... I assumed at this point that it’s not crusty soldering, and so it must be either a failing component or a failing jack. I have the scope out still, so I hook up to the output of the last tube and to the inputs of the power mosfets... still signal in both places, so I move to the outputs of the mosfets... still signal there, so I look at the schematic and there’s only one more component in the signal chain: the output protection relay. With scope on mosfet output and the positive binding post, I start playing and BLAMMO - cutout with signal before the relay but not after. I also know now that if you have a nonconductive maintenance implement (read: chopstick), you can tap suspect components with it to see what happens. I know this because, some months ago, I did this song and dance with the tubes. So tappy tap tap - sound comes right back in.

 

This is where understanding how electronics LEGO works comes back in. Unlike the output mosfets and the voltage control transistor, or the electrolytic capacitors, the original Ampeg part is totally obsolete and unavailable anywhere. One parts site that looks like it was last updated in 2002 lists a newer T9S or something part number on the picture next to Ampeg’s part number, which is also obsolete and unavailble... so now I have to figure out what the right replacement part is. I pulled a datasheet for the last known Ampeg part and go digging on Mouser and Digikey and eventually come up with a suitable replacement, once I learned what a relay having contacts in form-C actually meant and realized that the reason the original relays are obsolete is that the contact materials have been changed and they no longer sell open air relay units, instead preferring sealed devices (aside: I believe the original relay failed because of corrosion on the moving contact and surface ablation on the static contact, issues which perhaps the new materials will prevent and being sealed definitely will prevent).

 


And so yesterday, I replaced that relay. For the first time since probably 2013 or 2014 overall, and certainly the first time in a winter in at least that long, I was able to sit down, play at low volume, hear no weird distortions, develop no unwanted noise, and experience no random intermittent signal drops. I don’t know if the relay was the problem all along, and if I had been able to devote the time and energy to the diagnostics I did that one long day earlier, I might have been able to do this sooner. But I have an amp that, at 25 years old, pulls hard again and sounds better than I have heard it in a long, long time.

 

All of this is to say that, given the prospect of being asked to pay for lazy treatment twice, I’ve ended up learning a ton about repair, diagnostics, parts cannoneering, electronic component failure modes, and the value of smacking something with an intermittent failure. I’m happy with the immediate outcome, assuming I make it through the next few weeks without any more issues at all... but more importantly, I’m proud at how much I’ve learned in that time, and what I believe I’m capable of fixing now that I wouldn’t have even thought I could try, let alone succeed at. Which I think the takeaway here is probably not “if someone asks you to pay $100 to not fix your widget, buy an electronics repair lab, fix equipment for that lab, fix a different amplifier, build two other amplifiers, build some other test equipment, and then get mad at your widget and hit, thus revealing its secret” necessarily... but man, what a value I feel like I got from that trip to the shop.