Pass Labs XA30.5 Fuse Issue/Question


Hi all!

I recently acquired a Pass Labs XA30.5 from our friends at The Music Room and paired it with my Harbeth P3ESR speakers. It worked perfectly for about a week, delivering great sound with the needle hovering around 12 noon, even at high (to me) SPL. However, after a week, the fuse blew.

To get back to listening, I checked the back panel, purchased a set of 4A slow blow fuses (as labeled), and installed a fresh one. That’s when things started getting strange.

The unit powered on as usual, but as soon as I increased the volume to a moderate level, the needle swung wildly and pinned itself to the far right before the fuse blew again. I assumed it was just a bad fuse, so I replaced it with another. Same result. I tested the amp with a different set of speakers and a different source/preamp, but the same issue occurred every time.

I’m completely puzzled. It seems unlikely that all the replacement fuses are bad—could they be mislabeled? Does this pattern suggest any other potential issues?

I’ll reach out to Pass Labs if I can’t figure this out, but I wanted to check if anyone here has experienced something similar with their Pass equipment.

Thanks!

 

zm

Problem resolved and, in what is probably a surprise to nobody, the issue was 100% foolish user error and not at all to do with any fault in the amp.

I had completely forgotten (despite having owned a number of First Watt amps with the same characteristic) that the XA30.5 is a balanced output device with both terminals live. I stupidly had an REL sub hooked up via high level connection and managed to overlook the ground terminal Pass supplies for these purposes.

As soon as I rewired the sub correctly, the problematic behavior disappeared, the amp stopped eating fuses and is humming along happily as ever.

Thanks everyone for the advice - and mea culpa!

the output stage cannot generate sufficient current meaning that either power transistor replacement or filter caps or both.

While Pass Labs are great to work with, calling TMR should definitely be your first step.  They are pretty good about this stuff and should pay for the return shipping as well.

All the best.

Thanks everyone for your responses! After learning the hard way in my early audiophile days, I’m super careful about avoiding shorts and triple checked all connections, so I don’t think that’s the culprit here.

@noromance, I think you zeroed in on something important - the amp is totally stable at low levels and will run indefinitely in that state. It only begins acting crazy when pushed to higher levels - your inference about a problem with one or more of the transistors coming online as power increases sounds very plausible!

@audphile1, the amp is connected to a Core Power Technologies Equi=Core 1800 conditioner.

I’ll be calling TMR today to get their read on the situation and sounds like the amp going back might be the most likely outcome. I appreciate everyone’s input.

Sending it back to the music room for a full refund would be my only move. Done it before with zero issue as long as it's done within the return period. 

 

The meter on the Pass XA amplifiers measures bias current. Under normal circumstances it should barely move at all, and then only when playing very dynamic music at high levels. If the amp was shorted it may have incurred permanent damage and so exhibit the same behaviour with different speakers. Pass gear is extremely reliable but no product is infallible so it may also be a component failure within the amp. In any event, it should be taken back to the supplying dealer for investigation.

" I tested the amp with a different set of speakers and a different source/preamp, but the same issue occurred every time."

You should return the amp and get a refund from TMR. It sounds like that Pass is a lemon!

You should play the amplifier through another set of speakers before calling the seller or Pass. Tripping a mains fuse at higher playing volumes makes the Harbeths the prime suspect.

+1 on calling pass labs and the music room. I would start with pass labs to gather some data points for the conversation with TMR.

Question - do you have the amp connected to the wall or to some sort of power conditioner/strip?

If you recently purchased the amp, I would call The Music Room and ask for help.

@noromance 

Good thought about the short on one side of the speaker cables or another. If not, sounds like time to ship to Pass.

Are you sure there are no strands of wire touching at the speaker terminals?

Certain the fuses are the correct rating? You can read it on the metal end caps.

Can you run it at a low level for a period of time? I don't know the circuit but it's possible that it might bring on more transistors as power output is increases, and something there has failed.