Re: Repairing Alesis M1 Active mk2 Monitor Speakers
I know this might make me sound like a "vulture" / "scavenger", but with filth's frustration with this project, i struck a deal with him and bought his dead pair of M1's
First one was delivered last week, its pair is due next week.
This first one turned out to have quite the "chain" of problems. Before even plugging it in the first time, i took the liberty of doing the relocating trick with C8, as well as replacing D5 with a 1A fast-recovery diode. All the silicon on the primary measured fine. Amp-board-less testing revealed that the PWM controller was powering just fine, but both outputs were at least 50% higher than they were supposed to be (+/-36v and +/-57v instead of +/-18v and +/-36v).
After a quick consult with Th3_uN1Qu3, i even swapped out the TL431, to no avail. Which then led me to start measuring the resistors around it, and R30 (100k) turned out to be the culprit - open-circuit. Replacing it brought the output voltages back in line
The overvoltage, though, had killed the LM3886 woofer amp (both output transistors shorted through, so V+hi, V-hi and the woofer output were basically fused together). Fortunately i still had a few sample ones from well over a decade ago, and once that was replaced as well (complete with cleaning the heatsink, the mica isolators and the LM2876 tweeter amp, and adding some fresh Arctic Cooling MX-4 paste), the thing was completely revived
Looking forward to receiving its pair now...
I know this might make me sound like a "vulture" / "scavenger", but with filth's frustration with this project, i struck a deal with him and bought his dead pair of M1's

First one was delivered last week, its pair is due next week.
This first one turned out to have quite the "chain" of problems. Before even plugging it in the first time, i took the liberty of doing the relocating trick with C8, as well as replacing D5 with a 1A fast-recovery diode. All the silicon on the primary measured fine. Amp-board-less testing revealed that the PWM controller was powering just fine, but both outputs were at least 50% higher than they were supposed to be (+/-36v and +/-57v instead of +/-18v and +/-36v).
After a quick consult with Th3_uN1Qu3, i even swapped out the TL431, to no avail. Which then led me to start measuring the resistors around it, and R30 (100k) turned out to be the culprit - open-circuit. Replacing it brought the output voltages back in line

The overvoltage, though, had killed the LM3886 woofer amp (both output transistors shorted through, so V+hi, V-hi and the woofer output were basically fused together). Fortunately i still had a few sample ones from well over a decade ago, and once that was replaced as well (complete with cleaning the heatsink, the mica isolators and the LM2876 tweeter amp, and adding some fresh Arctic Cooling MX-4 paste), the thing was completely revived

Looking forward to receiving its pair now...

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