From my experience of two 1451 machines, I'd say it's a journey you'll enjoy and be on for a while. It seems to take a lot of work to get the last ounce of detail and refinement out of 'em, but your nice pcb will be a head-start over those of us using ancient machines!
Me Ray? The C1
I think the C1 is a great upgrade compared to the original crystal. I don't know the jitter specs, but I think you should not be fooled by the small PCB . Some types of these SMD oscillators have very good jitter spec's. When I compared The Flea with Tentlabs XO to Brent's C2, jitter was almost the same on my test system.
A Flea may bring some more gain though, because the power supply is less noisy. The same goes for a C2! But I predict it won't be the same world of difference as the crystal and C1.
Ray
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My Arcam Alpha was VERY good recently. That is until a ground wire lifted itself in the night and allowed the full input voltage out of the decoder's super reg, frying it. And I was being soooo careful with this one! It's meant to be my last ever CD player (yeah, right).
My older Philips CD650 wasn't anywhere close in terms of layout but the old higher end ones look decent. A new DAC could use a pc as source and the newest thinking on TDA1541 implementation. I bet it's good.
My older Philips CD650 wasn't anywhere close in terms of layout but the old higher end ones look decent. A new DAC could use a pc as source and the newest thinking on TDA1541 implementation. I bet it's good.
My Arcam Alpha was VERY good recently. That is until a ground wire lifted itself in the night and allowed the full input voltage out of the decoder's super reg, frying it. And I was being soooo careful with this one! It's meant to be my last ever CD player (yeah, right).
My older Philips CD650 wasn't anywhere close in terms of layout but the old higher end ones look decent. A new DAC could use a pc as source and the newest thinking on TDA1541 implementation. I bet it's good.
That sucks... what chip is that, no chance in fixing it?
It's an SAA7310GP (SMD). Thanks to Lee I have a replacement pull but I've not had chance to fit it yet. I've been very busy with other things, like being outside in the sun
Hopefully it'll work when the new chip's fitted.
Yes, the weather is also perfect here at the moment. But sometimes I can't help myself and find me sitting upstairs at 28*C near the soldering iron
I was just asking about the tx Ray because I'm pretty sure you'll get quite a large upgrade by giving the 7220 a beefier supply. It's always worked really well for me.
Cheers, Lee.
Thanks for the tip Lee. It will be on my to-do list for this DAC! It's very easy to separate the 7220's supply, because it has it's own voltage regulator. The one with the biggest heatsink, because the good 'ol chip consumes 180mA! Only the oscillator is on the same supply, but i'm going to use a Flea for that anyway.
Ray
Not long now.... soon, very soon...
Very impressive work (as usual )... What are those green caps and the smaller black ones with gold lettering ?... I love caps so I always start that way.
Thanks guys!
Yep, it's the AnalogMetric PCB. I think it's a nice and simple way to start my TDA1541 adventure. The 7220 doesn't have it's own supply, but all the chips do have their own voltage regulator(s). There's room for an oscillator and 4040 to do some direct clocking, but i've re-wired it so the CS8414's clock signals are used. I want to start at the beginning first and see what happens if the clocking is improved.
Ray
I've had one of these sitting in the box since christmas, I'm keeping it for a rainy day while I play with old philips players etc.
Are you using the DAC chip that comes with the kit, the date on the one that they sent me looks a bit suspicious I didn't think they were still being made in the 2000s.
Regards
Pete
Very impressive work (as usual )... What are those green caps and the smaller black ones with gold lettering ?... I love caps so I always start that way.
Thanks! The four green ones are Nichicon Muse, 4700u/35V. I thought I'd give those a try. The bigger black ones are Black Gates, 220u/16V and the smaller ones are Panasonic FM.
Are you using the DAC chip that comes with the kit, the date on the one that they sent me looks a bit suspicious I didn't think they were still being made in the 2000s.
Regards
Pete
No, I salvaged the chips from a broken CD40 player. Luckily the mech was still good, so that's a nice spare for my CD72
I beleive the 1541 was produced in Holland untill 2000, read here.
Ray
Just an update, I received more lm317 and swapped on the pos teddyreg and voltages are now to specs. +13.5v and -14v
Thanks Ray!
Now, I can't get the player to read a disc. I hit play and the display blinks but no tracks are read. Sometimes the disc will spin, but it won't read.
Ray I advised I check some of the most recent mods done and I did but still no luck. Any other ideas?
Thanks Ray!
Now, I can't get the player to read a disc. I hit play and the display blinks but no tracks are read. Sometimes the disc will spin, but it won't read.
Ray I advised I check some of the most recent mods done and I did but still no luck. Any other ideas?
That's good news. Are the LM's properly regulating now (18V output)?
The problem with your player could have numerous causes. There's the dreaded ribbon cable that can cause problems, or a bad solder joint/soldering splashes, cracked PCB trace or pad... Worst scenario is that your laser died or one of the servo IC's died. Less likely, but possible.
Did you try the service mode yet?
Ray
The problem with your player could have numerous causes. There's the dreaded ribbon cable that can cause problems, or a bad solder joint/soldering splashes, cracked PCB trace or pad... Worst scenario is that your laser died or one of the servo IC's died. Less likely, but possible.
Did you try the service mode yet?
Ray
Hm, unfortunately that's a very common error...
This requires some serious fault-finding. You have to check for correct supply voltages, and if the DAC get's it's clock signal. But first try re-seating the ribbon between the mainboard and the mech. Reversing it may help. Do you have a spare mech that you can swap?
Ray
This requires some serious fault-finding. You have to check for correct supply voltages, and if the DAC get's it's clock signal. But first try re-seating the ribbon between the mainboard and the mech. Reversing it may help. Do you have a spare mech that you can swap?
Ray
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