
RSD 1200.1 smoking am I dead in the water?
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RSD 1200.1 smoking am I dead in the water?
I got an RSD1200.1 off ebay and hooked her up. Long story short after powering up the head unit I heard some pops and she was smokin. I was pretty miffed and thought I must have hooked it up backwards. Checked that and ground and power were hooked up correctly. No signal was even going to the sub as you have to turn the sub channel on the head unit for it to even send a signal. The fuse on the distribution block did not even blow. The fuses on the amp definitely looked popped. So do you all think the amp is gone or could changing the fuses maybe get it going again? I have a feeling that she is dead I smelled microchip smell really bad. I have not had bass in almost a year I was really looking forward to this
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Yeah me either. I might have gotten a lemon. Figures I got a smokin deal on itBfowler wrote:no, they are sealed over with plexi glass.
can't really think of a weak point in the amp that would cause this.

- thedeal7235
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- thedeal7235
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Took the cover out and here is what I saw. I know the picture is crap sorry. There is some scorching under the rails (is that what they are called, they look like that anyway) closest to the speaker input. Only those four had it the rest did not have any scorching underneath. So how does something like this happen? Would this be an expensive repair if I had a local shop do it? Or would it be worth paying PG 175? Thanks all for any input.
Those are the power supply mosfets. Under normal conditions, they are very robust, but when thy go, they go catastrophically. Was the amp brand new? If not, I would suspect a shorted output transistor caused the problem. If it was new, then how sure are you of your sub and wireing there. Powering up the amp into a shorted VC or output wiring can cause this sort of thing. The protection is supposed to protect against this, but it is sometimes too late by the time protection trips.
Lots of things could cause this, in a brand new amp though, not so many. A cold solder joint on the gate to one of the mosfets can cause it to self destruct if the gate floats and power is applied, but that is about the only thing I can think of that would hit a brand new amp. A cold joint could make it through testing and inspection, and then fail open during vibration from shipping and installation. Regardless, all of the mosfets in that bank should be replaced, as one failure will stress all of them. This alone is a pretty good chunk of change. About $2-$3 each in small quantities. If there are other problems, that caused this, it will add up quickly. If there is a shorted output transistor, they will be much more expensive than the PS mosfets, and should also all be replaced for the bad channel, regardless of if all are bad or not.
Long story short, PG is probably your best bet. If you find a local shop that will work on it, they may not be able to do the work in the end. Most don't have any real experience with class D amps, and even if they do, most of the PG class d's I have had open have the identification markings from the class D amplifier section/module removed to prevent reverse engineering. I have seen a lot of products come from over seas like this, so it may not be PG's doing, but rather the facility putting them together.
Later,
Jason
Lots of things could cause this, in a brand new amp though, not so many. A cold solder joint on the gate to one of the mosfets can cause it to self destruct if the gate floats and power is applied, but that is about the only thing I can think of that would hit a brand new amp. A cold joint could make it through testing and inspection, and then fail open during vibration from shipping and installation. Regardless, all of the mosfets in that bank should be replaced, as one failure will stress all of them. This alone is a pretty good chunk of change. About $2-$3 each in small quantities. If there are other problems, that caused this, it will add up quickly. If there is a shorted output transistor, they will be much more expensive than the PS mosfets, and should also all be replaced for the bad channel, regardless of if all are bad or not.
Long story short, PG is probably your best bet. If you find a local shop that will work on it, they may not be able to do the work in the end. Most don't have any real experience with class D amps, and even if they do, most of the PG class d's I have had open have the identification markings from the class D amplifier section/module removed to prevent reverse engineering. I have seen a lot of products come from over seas like this, so it may not be PG's doing, but rather the facility putting them together.
Later,
Jason
M: M100, M44 for a custom amp project
Zx: Zx500, Zx450, Black Zx350
ZxTi: 4 Zx600Ti's, 1 Zx400Ti
Ti: 5 800.1's & 900.7 for a custom amp project. 1 1200.1, 1 1000.2
Tantrum: 2 1200.1's, 1 600.4, 1 500.2
XS: XS6600
Zx: Zx500, Zx450, Black Zx350
ZxTi: 4 Zx600Ti's, 1 Zx400Ti
Ti: 5 800.1's & 900.7 for a custom amp project. 1 1200.1, 1 1000.2
Tantrum: 2 1200.1's, 1 600.4, 1 500.2
XS: XS6600
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Thanks guys for all the help and suggestions I couldn't get a hold of the repairs person at PG today so I will try them tomorrow. I was afraid to connect the sub to another amp. Nothing like this has even happened before and I have installed a few different setups in my cars. Anyhow I might bite the bullet and get her repaired. I also saw a xenon on ebay and am tempted to have matching amps.