Whammy headphone amp help

Hi,
Not sure if this is the right place as i am new to this forum, i have just completed build of whammy by hardwiring, and when hooked up with phones, sound is flat, low volume, muddy and just nor what it should be. Phones are Hifiman 400i, which can be driven reasonable well with another, less powerful headphone amp i have



Obviously there is a problem somewhere.


The signal is coming through ok, and the background is absolutely dead quite, so earthing would not appear to be the problem.


I have checked the wiring many times, re-soldered all joints, replaced the opamp and mosfets (and put on separate board).
The power supply seems ok, +17v and -17v (leds), and on no load the will sit for hours without any heat, when i connect the circuit the voltage regulators will heat up slowly until sinks are very hot (too hot in my opinion), yet the mosfets are barley warm.


I have built a number of tube amps in the past without problem, but frustrated i cant seem to find the problem with this.


Any help would be greatly appreciated.


Thanks
 
I have attached photo but you wont see much from that due to the hard wiring, the schematic is the standard, i have not changed in any way.


Assuming the wiring is correct and no bad joints, what would cause such symptoms



Thanks
 

Attachments

  • IMG_4899 (2).jpg
    IMG_4899 (2).jpg
    766.7 KB · Views: 188
  • vJ42YI66Qs4QijWj.full.jpg
    vJ42YI66Qs4QijWj.full.jpg
    215.8 KB · Views: 178
Assume that it is same poor sound in both channels?

It would be nice if you could look at the signal with a test signal as input but you don't have a scope?

To test if the amp can deliver some power you could check if it can deliver some voltage sving over a load resistor? .....maybe a 100 ohm resistor? ....a few volts RMS should be possible? ....5 volts RMS should be no problem?
 
Hi Meper,

with 100r connected across out/gnd, getting 10mV only, i tried 66r and get same.
100r across power supply +/gnd +17.6v, and -/gnd -17.5v.

Voltage measured across source resistors about 580mV,

Also attached voltages at opamp with dummy load resistors attached.

The outputs, pins 1 and 7 seem a bit odd
 
Since you have correct bias you should maybe concentrate on the op-amp circuit. It is this circuit that makes the voltage gain. So at op-amp output you should have x4-x5 gain compared to the op-amp input. Can you measure these two signal levels?
 
Output of op-amp is pin 7 for L and pin 1 for R channel. Both goes to a 47 ohm resistor (R17 and R27). You should be able to measure some Volts RMS at the op-amp output if you have a "decent" input signal and you turn up the volumen.