valve5425 Posted November 1, 2015 Report Posted November 1, 2015 (edited) Gread gods, that's a masterpiece !@G600 and UFN; Cheers!A few more pics here. http://s283.photobucket.com/user/valve5425/library/KGST (The aluminium base has been polished since the photo was taken) Edited November 1, 2015 by valve5425 Response to additional post
gepardcv Posted November 1, 2015 Report Posted November 1, 2015 Gorgeous build, thank you for sharing!
chinsettawong Posted November 2, 2015 Report Posted November 2, 2015 Wow. That's amazingly beautiful. 1
wink Posted November 2, 2015 Report Posted November 2, 2015 My homage to Steampunk. All it's missing is the steam whistle....
johnwmclean Posted November 2, 2015 Report Posted November 2, 2015 (edited) Just picked my jaw back up. That’s the dogs bollocks! Edited November 2, 2015 by johnwmclean
eggil Posted November 2, 2015 Report Posted November 2, 2015 amazing stunningly beautiful.... I am at a loss for words.Ready for the Smithsonian!
valve5425 Posted November 2, 2015 Report Posted November 2, 2015 All it's missing is the steam whistle.... Maybe if I crank up the current regs I could get some steam out of the vents. I'm looking forward to seeing it all lit up. As you may have gathered, I don't rush these things, so I'll aim for Christmas and get some pics posted. (This Christmas!!!)
samsie Posted November 3, 2015 Report Posted November 3, 2015 wow, this is absolutely gorgerious.Are you going to put an engine inside at a later stage so the amp can drive itself from the sitting room to your bed side when it is needed?samP.S. really like to know how to bend the copper tube to make this.
valve5425 Posted November 3, 2015 Report Posted November 3, 2015 (edited) Thanks! Hmmm, hadn't considered motorising it.No bending involved. They're just 10mm, end feed, 90 degree joints, used in plumbing. I just loved the shape of them, plus I figured they'd stop too much dust getting inside the chassis whilst letting some heat out. Brass block was drilled to same diameter, joints push fit and epoxy glue to fix. I dismissed soldering them in as tidying up the solder joints on the top side would have been a nightmare. I polished the parts with a buffing wheel on my pillar drill before gluing, and again when the piece had setInsanity "And what about fingerprints on that copper? Only touch with white gloves?"Yep, a bit of a problem! Wiring the top to the B+ would solve that. (Only joking folks) Edited November 3, 2015 by valve5425
Peleus Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 About 3 weeks ago, Joe reported his PSU of KGST blowout twice. After discussion through FB, I suggested reconstructing the whole thing by a skillful someone. I recommend the man, Getpointlee, to take the job. Getpointlee, once a audio dealer and a owner of audio manufacturing, live in Taipei, Taiwan. You may be interested in his blog(http://getpointlee.blogspot.tw/) . Another local DIYer provided a new PSU board for this whole new reconstructing. There are about 3 to 4 Diyers in Taiwan concern the progress of the problem that Joe met. We constantly discussed on the local forum or on the FB through private message. Unfortunately, It blowed up again! First blow is the bias parts, then the positive rail patrs. Very Very strange, right? After detailed check, Getpointlee found the problem may caused by the arc between the TP and the negative output rail. as below picture~ The distance between the TP and the negative rail output line is just only 1mm, but the voltage between theses is almost 1000V! One mm is enough or not, could be a issue to discuss. However, no one here would like to have third blow again. So, for the safety issue, Getpointlee recommend the mod as below~ Wish these information help your guys to know that the HV PSU blowup may cause by the arc between the TP and negative rail output.
chinsettawong Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 Thanks for the info. For fixing the small insulation like that, you can also use the clear fingernail paint too. Wachara C.
wokstarr26 Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 Must check my KGST build and modify board. You just cannot be too careful with HV. 1
sorenb Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 (edited) 7 hours ago, Peleus said: After detailed check, Getpointlee found the problem may caused by the arc between the TP and the negative output rail. as below picture~ The distance between the TP and the negative rail output line is just only 1mm, but the voltage between theses is almost 1000V! One mm is enough or not, could be a issue to discuss. However, no one here would like to have third blow again. So, for the safety issue, Getpointlee recommend the mod as below~ Your board seems filled with flux residue ... did you, or the skilled someone, clean the boards before use? The soldering seems like it could be enhanced a bit also - might be the light and how the picture was taken ... Edited November 23, 2015 by sorenb
Peleus Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 4 hours ago, sorenb said: Your board seems filled with flux residue ... did you, or the skilled someone, clean the boards before use? The soldering seems like it could be enhanced a bit also - might be the light and how the picture was taken ... So.....What do you mean? The fact was there is two time blowup of the PSU. Did the layout cause the blowup in some unknown situation? That is the issue we really care about. Am I clear for you?
spritzer Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 1mm for those voltage levels is overkill to the n-th degree so it should never have shorted. We use 25mill from the pads to the ground plane which is 0.635mm so 1mm is plenty. The flux however will short out the boards and it has to be cleaned off!!!
joehpj Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 It was actually my amp. I had little experience of building high voltage things. After the first blown PSU, I contacted Peleus. Peleus was kind to help me and introduced a experienced technician to build the amp for me. After two days of run-in. The positive rail and the bias part blown again with very loud sound and light. The weather was very humid recently (rainy days and I live beneath a hill). I don't know if it was the reason of the short of the negative and the bias rail. There is no solder, no flux between the TP of the bias and the negative rail. The white sandy smoke around the TP and the short negative rail was more like something left by heat. The upper right corner of the TP was blown away with negative rail having two small dot of melted copper wire.After discussion on the local forum, we conclude it may caused by arcing between rails. It may because of the PCB quality, the weather, or something we don't know. The PSU just end up like this so the mod of the board was to eliminate any chance of arcing happening again.
spritzer Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 Humidity and the PCB quality could be an issue here along with dust. The solder resist some manufacturers use is a bad joke and will not insulate much.
sorenb Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 15 minutes ago, spritzer said: Humidity and the PCB quality could be an issue here along with dust. The solder resist some manufacturers use is a bad joke and will not insulate much. what would be a recommended way of cleaning a pcb from flux residue? do you test your pcbs with an isolation tester?
n_maher Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 Get the purest isopropyl alcohol that you can find in a decent quantity and several sacrificial tooth brushes. Lather, rinse, repeat until clean. Manage the waste appropriately. 1
sorenb Posted November 23, 2015 Report Posted November 23, 2015 21 minutes ago, n_maher said: Get the purest isopropyl alcohol that you can find in a decent quantity and several sacrificial tooth brushes. Lather, rinse, repeat until clean. Manage the waste appropriately. Thanks....I've use this one ...doesn't tell what the magic solution comprises, but it surely smells like isopropanol ....seems to work ok
johnwmclean Posted November 24, 2015 Report Posted November 24, 2015 2 hours ago, sorenb said: Thanks....I've use this one ...doesn't tell what the magic solution comprises, but it surely smells like isopropanol ....seems to work ok I wouldn’t use it, has to be at least 98-99% pure isopropyl alcohol as Nate has alluded to. The lower graded solution probably would do no harm it just wouldn’t have the cutting capability of a pure grade solution, hence you end up doing more passes to clean of the flux gunk.
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now