Another Dynaco ST-70 thread

Doctor Olds

Active Member
I am not here all that often but I have another problem and I am pretty sure someone here can tell me where to look. I now have a problem with the ST-70 I have owned for about 25 years. The first 15 years or so were trouble free and other than checking the bias every once in a while this unit was trouble free. Then it died and I found the 5AR4 rectifier tube went and while testing the tubes the rest were weak so I replaced them all. The new 5AR4 failed within a couple of days so I began a thread here and removed 2 huge external caps added to help the bass response then replaced the can cap on the amp with a new CP one and installed new orange drops on the original board. It ran fine and sounded good but began to burn out the 5AR4 occasionally (every other year or so.) I installed a NOS (ouch) 5AR4 a few years ago which solved that problem. The unit developed a "hum" / both speakers in stereo mode so now I am back here......all the tubes are lit normally so I tried a spare 5AR4 just in case which did not help. When I checked the bias I found it was very low @ .44 VDC. I tried turning up the bias set (for just a second or two) and could only achieve .70 and the hum did not change either louder or quieter (I turned it down to where it was.) The unit is now down on my bench and I am wondering where to look first?

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Any help would be appreciated. Doc
 
The bias was low on both sides or just one? How old are the el34's? The buzz could be coming from a number of things, weak tubes, something wrong in the bias circuit, bad choke...
 
I can't really tell by the photo, but did you replace the sellenium recitifer with a 1N4007 or similar diode already?

Al. Wise
 
The sellenium isn't there, it would be on the center threaded screw, there is a black diode in it's place.
 
It was equally low on both channels (both were set at 1.2 to 1.2 vdc) and dropped dramatically to .40 when the hum appeared. I did not mess with the sellenium rectifier since the diode was already there. (It was probably changed when whomever before me added the huge caps externally.) I also did not change any of the carbon resistors or the two silver electrolytic caps inside the unit.
 
Hiya,

Not a exact ST-70 expert but what about those long silver caps underneath. Also the mustard colored Erie's on the driver board should be looked at.

Also clean and re-tension all sockets and verify all solder joints on the board.

Frannie
 
I think the fact that the tubes are drawing LESS current points away from it being a bias supply problem. To get less current, the bias supply would have to be more negative than normal. Don't know how that would happen. I wonder what the B+ is on the output tubes.
 
Three things I notice from the pics:

1 The can cap is very underrated (475v) and is probably bad. It should be rated for 525v! Replace it with a NEW can cap or a cap-board.

2 Those Sovtek 7199's are known to be noisy and unreliable. Won't affect bias though.

3 When that chinese 5AR4 fails it's usually fireworks, so keep an eye on it!
 
Bad cap?

Check the bias supply filter (electrolytic) cap(s). The low bias voltage is most likely caused by excess cap leakage.
 
My guess -- just that -- is that the first section of the CE cap has gone bad, and that the B+ has dropped quite a bit. A read on the B+ will shoot a hole in that theory or confirm.
 
I have my original Dynaco Manual so I used the test there.

Here is what I got:
At the EL34's
1 & 8 = .47 /.41 dcv to chassis (same as bias)
2 to 7 = 6.5 / 6.1 acv
3 = 384 dcv (all)
4 = 385 dcv (all)
5 = -35.5 dcv (all)
6= -35.5 dcv (all)

At the can cap:
The square 328 dcv
The triangle 371
The half moon 256
Plain 375

At the diode
-78.7 dcv
58.0 acv

Printed circuit
#3 324 dcv
#18 324 dcv

5AR4

8 & 2 = 375 dcv
3 & 6 = 387 acv

7199

4 to 5 and 15 to 16 = 6.59 acv

Interestingly when I touched / wiggled the stereo / mono switch the hum changed so I clean it with de-oxit which helped the wiggle noises but not the hum. (neither wiggle nor cleaning helped the loss of bias.)
 
I show about 413 volts at the plates so you are running a bit low. Did you try a different rectifier?
 
The half moon which is D should be 435V. D is fed by the rect tube and the main transformer. So either the can is going bad, rectifier is on it's way out or the main transformer is failing. Do you have another rectifier tube to try? The can looks new to me so doubt it's that. The rectifier tube seems to be what you've replaced most, but what causing tube to fail?
 
Hiya,

He says he tried a spare tube. I am gonna go with the Can Cap (Yes even "New" ones are bad) because the transformer failing is too horrible to consider.

Frannie
 
I tried a new rectifier tube with the same result (hum). I agree that it must be related to the rectifier circuit since both channels are affected equally. I can re-install the old can cap (I still have it) then retest the voltages. Is there a way to isolate the power transformer prior to ordering a new one? Also again why is this unit prone to burning out rectifier tubes?
 
Hiya,

Also again why is this unit prone to burning out rectifier tubes?

Did the burning out of rectifier tubes cease when you went with the NOS tube over the newer production tubes ??

If so what brands where you using that were failing ?? Not all 5AR4's are created equal you see.

Frannie
 
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