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Accuphase E650 XLR Input issues
I'm asking on behalf of a dear friend, he has an Accuphase E650 which was used on RCA input without any issues, recently with an upgrade of the source, XLR was chose as the preferred connection.
It works fine initially, however just after few days, the left speaker start to sounded noticeably softer than the right, sometimes it normalise sometimes it stay on as is for long period of time, these were done as isolation steps:
- Continue to use RCA input, works consistently
- Swap left / right XLR input, still the left speaker softer noticeably
- Swap different DAC with XLR output, still the same behavior, left speaker softer noticeably
- Tried different XLR cables, still the same behavior, left speaker softer noticeably
- Tried both the XLR preamp input (CD-in, and Balance-in), same behavior, left speaker softer noticeably
Ran out of options, the challenges was the amp was purchased from an oversea distributor, getting local dealer support can be a hit and miss, trying to post this up to see if anyone ran into such issue before and also seeks some opinion.
@paradis Here is simplest method to check if balanced input functions properly: 1) need to make custom “debug” RCA - to XLR cable, where RCA hot pin to pin 2 + 3 at XLR, shorted together. Shield / RCA GND as ussual goes to XLR pin 1. 2) using this cable, connect source to left and after to right Accuphase balanced input, and check output. 3) faulty balanced input with this “debug” RCA-XLR cable, will sound significantly louder. Ideally balanced input should not produce any sound, good pre/amp will produce signal at -40dB or lower level. |
@aschuh hopefully that the case so it's not too big of an issue, will seek for some tech help |
Given the diagnostics performed and assuming that ‘softer’ means lower volume, I assume that either pin 2 or 3 (in any case, not the ground pin) of the left XLR connector in the amp (not the cable) are suffering from a ‘cold’ soldering contact, or more precisely, a hairline fissure (this would explain random ‘recovery’). Have a technician take a look at the XLR input of the amp. Good luck |
i just want to be clear and say that i have tremendous respect and liking for accuphase gear which i have owned on several occasions in the past it is wonderful gear, so beautifully built and sound quality to die for my initial response to the op was specifically on the narrow topic of xlr input implementation in their relatively recent pieces my experience otherwise with accuphase amps have been wonderful, and they have been utterly reliable and absolutely built to last a lifetime |
@lalitk et al hey folks, i am sorry -- i didn’t mean to cause undue consternation i bought a used e270 couple years ago and felt the balanced input did not sound as pure as the rca input, to my surprise (i had a couple dacs at the time that had both single ended and balanced outs and i could hear the difference in my system) - i did not personally try the higher up models, and perhaps those are immune from this issue after that experience i saw the following information on the asr site -- please note that i am not a ’measurements guy’ in the least, particularly with respect to using measurements as a proxy for sound quality of any given component, but it was interesting to see the findings solely in regard to noise level in the preamp section and thru the xlr input of this tested unit i also spoke to usa importer briefly on this topic and confirmed this was an area that accuphase japan was working on, as traditionally accuphase gear was exclusively single ended in design, with no balanced connections thereafter, with the announcement of the replacement model e280, accuphase themselves mentioned that one of the notable improvement areas was in the balanced input noise level - see below page 5 https://www.accuphase.com/technical_information/e-280_technical_information.pdf
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@paradis sounds like this is a real functionality issue, I would start debugging it with balanced input preamp inspection. |
@westcoastaudiophile it just means the left channel is considerably softer and once it normalized (sometimes few minutes after playing music), it just wake up with the right volume, sometimes it doesn't wake up at all, if that makes sense based on the explanation, no such issue if RCA being used |
@paradis "I'm asking on behalf of a dear friend” if your “friend’s" question is targeting to collect Accuphase reliability and performance feedback, my personal experience w/ Accuphase is 100% positive. " sounded noticeably softer than the right” - Can you please help to understand what exactly technical problem is, such as but not limited to distortions, tone/EQ ch difference? |
@lalitk 100% agreed! My experience with Accuphase components is positive, and in my setup all Accuphase components produce ZERO background noise! |
"the accuphase integrateds are known to have poor implementation of xlr input(s) - they have been measured to be rather noisy compared to the standard rca inputs" @jjss49 : more details, recognized Lab measurement results, etc., will be helpful! |
“the accuphase integrateds are known to have poor implementation of xlr input(s) - they have been measured to be rather noisy compared to the standard rca inputs” I beg to differ with your feedback. Is this your personal experience? I never heard or experienced such a thing as poor implementation of XLR inputs…btw, Accuphase amps or Integrated are dead quiet..zero noise or hiss. |