| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name
 | Date | Lines | 
|---|
| 2319.1 | Check the contacts | CADSE::KOMISKY |  | Wed Apr 18 1990 20:31 | 11 | 
|  |     Check the fit of the left channel connectors with your cable
    connectors. Make sure the signal and ground contacts are tight and
    dirt free. Connectors actually change size as they warm up - so any gap
    may disappear after the equipment warms.
    
    Beware also of cracks in your cables that create intermittent breaks or
    low quality connections that may change as the cable heats up.
    
    Chronic victim of imperfect connectors
    Dennis
    
 | 
| 2319.2 | check connections first | STROKR::DEHAHN | What a difference a RAY makes | Thu Apr 19 1990 09:35 | 6 | 
|  |     
    If the Carver has relays on the outputs then one of them could be
    getting crappy.
    
    CdH
    
 | 
| 2319.3 | Poltergeists | TALLIS::PALMER | Colonel Mode | Mon Apr 23 1990 15:53 | 7 | 
|  |     Since it didn't do it at the shop but does at your home it leads me to
    believe that it has something to do with your home environment. If the
    cable connections are OK (verify by swapping L/R) try hooking up your
    amp far from any other equipment and check the grounding of the ac
    power. It might be an obscure RFI or ground loop problem.
    
    Chris
 | 
| 2319.4 |  | CADSE::KOMISKY |  | Mon Apr 23 1990 20:46 | 9 | 
|  |     An obscure RFI or ground loop problem that disappears after 60 seconds
    suggests a thermal component to the problem or an oscillation that
    requires 60 seconds to die down. 
    
    Or a timer circuit on the relay output is partially opening the relay
    and degrading the signal.
    
    Is the delay always 60 seconds? Even when the equipment is hot?
    
 | 
| 2319.5 | More ... | FGVAXX::LAING | Soft-Core Cuddler*Jim Laing*282-1476 | Fri Apr 27 1990 15:58 | 15 | 
|  |     No, the delay is only when it's turned on COLD.  As for the problem not
    showing up in the store ... well, that's what the tech said ... not
    believing him, *I* tried it in the store (amid screaming guitars/keys/
    drums/people/etc) and really thought that I, too, heard NO problem in
    either channel at the store.  
    
    Looks like I'll have to do some more experimenting at home ... then
    maybe taking it back into the shop (store) ...
    
    Other than a 60-second inconvenience, this isn't really a problem for
    me - once the amp "warms up" it works fine thru the whole gig.  But,
    I have to wonder if this is a harbinger of further problems down the
    line ...
    
    	-Jim
 | 
| 2319.6 | A good starting point... | CADSE::KOMISKY |  | Fri May 04 1990 18:46 | 8 | 
|  |     Buy a can of the spray coolant for electronic troubleshooting 
    (try Radio Shack or U-DO-IT Electronics type places) and see
    if you can recreate the problem. Maybe it is only a thermal problem.
    
    If you cannot recreate it by chilling the components, the circuit
    board, or the connectors, then you have a real headache.
    
    
 |