Ah ha! My 300 did not die! It just got hot. And when it got hot it stopped working. But how it got hot is a bit of a mystery to me. I had tuned up my 300, and was enjoying the lovely round sound it produces. I plugged it into my wee 420 and began to enjoy the filter as well. I had sawtooth out going to the filter in, and filter out to a tiny amp I have on the bench. At one point I decided to turn the res control to "10" on the filter, it went into self osc, I turned the freq all the way up too (on the filter) and it went beyond what I could hear or the poor little amp could put out. After that the 300 started acting very strange, its pitch became unstable, and within 45 seconds it would not produce waveforms at all. At this point I got bummed, and went looking for trouble on the 300's circuit board. After 20 minutes of looking, and finding no wave form, nor anything that looked wrong besides the lack of output from Q2, I shut the whole thing down. Hours later I came back (could not sleep, was trying to figure out why it was busted), powered it up and it worked. My workbench is in the garage, and it is currently about 55 F in there most of the time. It came up, had the saw out straight into the amp, and it held steady for about an hour with no problem. I did find that if I blew on the board, it would shut off, just to come back on in about 20 seconds. I knew the circuit was temperature sensitive, but should I consider building some little enclosure for the Q1/Q2 pair? Anyone have any idea how an MOTM-420 would cause that part of the circuit to get really hot and shut down? Both modules seem to work sonically pretty well, but I am concerned that something is wrongÂ… Bruce
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MOTM-300 and Thermal Problem
2001-02-23 by bruce@sigalarm.com
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