Yamaha P4500 Power Amplifier 2-Channel Logo

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Anonymous Posted on Jan 24, 2011

Yamaha p4500 keeps blowing both ET5AH250V fuses help?

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Grubhead

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  • Yamaha Master 5,755 Answers
  • Posted on Jan 26, 2011
 Grubhead
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Suspect an overload in the power section, or more likely the main amp. A semi-conductor device is now acting like it was a piece of wire. Easy to spot with an ohm meter, it will just like you have touch the test probes together! My guess it will be one or more of the things on the big heatsink that's gone.

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Hi Joel, although we've sourced detailed schematic for this P4500 amplifier, there are no many voltage details on it for manufactures sake. Anyway, mine findings are. Secondary winding on main transformer should supply no less than 2 x 75 volts which makes after rectifying and filtration no less than 2 x 90 volts on capacitors with amplifier without input signal. Also transformer has to be very "hard" , otherwise amp will start clipping before reaching stated wattage on output.
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The manual says the heat sink is too hot or an unacceptable DC voltage was sensed going out.

http://www.retrevo.com/support/Yamaha-P4500-Amps-manual/id/962bh144/t/2/

Generally speaking, an amp attempts to protect itself from heat, shorts, overloads and operator exuberance by refusing to turn on or stay on; or it may turn on but produce no audio to the speakers.

Overloads can be from excessive periods of high output or marginally low impedance loading by the speakers; and shorts would be wiring issues or a speaker blowing up.

You should be able to feel if it's hot. WHY is it overheating? Make sure it has sufficient ventilation on all sides and that vent holes are not blocked by dust balls. Ensure the fan (if equipped) is running as designed (some only operate on demand). Clean dust and debris from it.

If the amp comes back on after cooling, you're lucky. They only have so many self-protection cycles in their lives so continuously resetting or cycling their power without addressing the cause can do more harm than good.

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Check for loose speaker connections at the speaker as another possible root cause for intermittent shutdown.
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http://elektrotanya.com/yamaha_p4500.pdf/download.html

When you use the link you get to a page where you have to wait some minutes to be possible the downloading so please be patient.
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[email protected]

TURN THE BALANCE CONTROL IN THE MIDLE
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Try reverse connecting the channels, in order to locate where is the problem; at the cables or at the amplifier.

In case of a problem or clarification, don't hesitate to post.

Thanks and regards
Please kindly rate this solution
Stelios
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Hi..
It will need service.
I would call the music store closest to you that sells PA gear and ask who fixes theirs.
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You only normally get that when the Volume over peaks, and the amp will automatically cut out to prevent it fron blowing the whole P.A up.
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Hi radek

If it is a toroidal,they have a nasty habit of going shorted turns on the primary. Is it blowing fuses? Let me know

robotek
ex In'gill ;)
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