Pass Labs heatsinks temperature


Hi all

I have Pass Labs xa60.5 monoblocks and they are always warm to the touch at the heatsinks and not as hot as other class A amps I'm familiar with. A friend from the US that has the same model visited my place and told me his amps ran very much hotter than mine. I got concerned and looked at the manual where temperature was estimated at 55 degrees Celsius. I estimate mine at around 40 Degrees. I'm concerned my amps are not biased to pure class A as they should be. I contacted Pass and while they repeated that heat should be around 55 deg. they had no idea if my concerns are valid and they sounded quite mysterious about it. Did anyone has a xa.5 series model ever measured its temperature or has an idea what can I measure without opening the amps (with a technician) that will prove that they are working only in pure class A ?
Thanks in advance
icorem

Showing 3 responses by elberoth2

Get yourself two multimeters and bias it by yourself. On the scale form 1 to 10, I would rate it as 2 - easy DIY project. 15 minutes and you are done (then you will have to recheck in 1h or so).
Then take them to your dealer or send back to Pass to check bias. It is definately set too low.
Icorem - I though you are from the US. If you are from Israel, sending them back for sth as trivial as biasing, would be a total waste of money and effort. Just take the amps to your local tech, or ask one to come over.

Here is XA-30.5 bias procedure for reference purposes only - it is really easy !

(pls note that you need XA-60.5 biasing manual to perform this task on your amps !)

1) Measuring across test points adjust bias for each channel to 125mV. Pay attention to DCO across the two speaker terminals and from each terminal to ground, aim for as close to zero as possible. (P1 and P2 on the socket mounted module adjust offset.)

2)Replace cover allow unit to warm up to 53 degrees C at the heatsink, which wil take a couple hours.

3)Final adjust which will take several attempts with time lapse to allow For stabilization of temperature, and bias which tracks temp as a NTC.

4)Target Bias is 135 mV, again paying attention to DCO, absolute and differential

PS. From what I remeber, I needed 4 Digital Multimeters (you can get the cheapest one you could fing from ebay - no name ones are ~ $10 each) to perform biasing on my XA-30.5:

- one to measure DCO across the two speaker terminals
- one to masure DCO from each terminal to ground
- one for each of two bias test points (A nad B)