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® ®

Model 1600VI and 1800VI Professional Stereo Power Amplifiers

©

1998 Bose Corporation

Service Manual
Part Number 199747 Rev. 00

CONTENTS
Safety Information ............................................................................................................................ 4 Electrostatic Discharge Sensitive (ESDS) Device Handling ........................................................ 4 1800VI Specifications ................................................................................................................... 5-6 1600VI Specifications ................................................................................................................... 7-8 Figure 1. 1600VI and 1800VI Block Diagram .................................................................................. 9 Theory of Operation .................................................................................................................. 10-18 Disassembly/Assembly Procedures ....................................................................................... 19-30 Figure 2. Cover Removal Screw Location Side View ..................................................................... 19 Figure 3. Cover Attaching Hardware .............................................................................................. 20 Figure 4. Rear View - Attaching Hardware ..................................................................................... 20 Figure 5. 240V Configuration ......................................................................................................... 21 Figure 6. 1600VI and 1800VI Amplifier Assembly ......................................................................... 21 Figure 7. Bottom Mounted Components ........................................................................................ 22 Figure 8. Side View - Bottom Mounted Components ..................................................................... 27 Figure 9. Heatsink Bridge ............................................................................................................... 27 Figure 10. Input Module Screw Location ........................................................................................ 29 Test Procedures ........................................................................................................................ 31-33 Figure 11. EQ Card Placement ...................................................................................................... 31 Frequency Response Test Table .................................................................................................. 32 Part List Notes ................................................................................................................................ 34 Main Part List ............................................................................................................................. 35-37 Figure 12. Amplifier Test Setup Diagram ....................................................................................... 31 Figure 13. Front Panel Views, 100V and 120V Variation, 240V Variation ...................................... 37 Figure 14. Back Panel View ........................................................................................................... 37 Figure 15. Cross Section View ....................................................................................................... 38 Figure 16. 1600VI and 1800VI Amplifier Top View ........................................................................ 39 Figure 17. 1600VI and 1800VI, Amplifier Assembly Removed View ............................................. 40 Electrical Part List ..................................................................................................................... 41-54 Packing List .................................................................................................................................... 55 Figure 18. 1600VI and 1800VI Amplifiers Packing Diagram ......................................................... 55 Wiring Diagrams ........................................................................................................................ 56-57 Figure 19. 1600VI and 1800VI Wiring Diagram ............................................................................. 56 Figure 20. 1600VI and 1800VI 240V Wiring Diagram ................................................................... 57 IC Pinout Diagrams ................................................................................................................... 58-59

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CAUTION: The Bose® 1600VI and 1800VI Professional Stereo Power Amplifiers contain no user-serviceable parts. To prevent warranty infractions, refer servicing to warranty service centers or factory service.

PROPRIETARY INFORMATION THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS PROPRIETARY INFORMATION OF BOSE® CORPORATION WHICH IS BEING FURNISHED ONLY FOR THE PURPOSE OF SERVICING THE IDENTIFIED BOSE PRODUCT BY AN AUTHORIZED BOSE SERVICE CENTER OR OWNER OF THE BOSE PRODUCT, AND SHALL NOT BE REPRODUCED OR USED FOR ANY OTHER PURPOSE.

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SAFETY INFORMATION
1. Parts that have special safety characteristics are identified by the symbol on schematics or by special notes on the parts list. Use only replacement parts that have critical characteristics recommended by the manufacturer. 2. Make leakage current or resistance measurements to determine that exposed parts are acceptably insulated from the supply circuit before returning the unit to the customer. Use the following checks to perform these measurements: A. Leakage Current Hot Check-With the unit completely reassembled, plug the AC line cord directly into a 120V AC outlet. (Do not use an isolation transformer during this test.) Use a leakage current tester or a metering system that complies with American National Standards Institute (ANSI) C101.1 "Leakage Current for Appliances" and Underwriters Laboratories (UL) 1492 (71). With the unit AC switch first in the ON position and then in OFF position, measure from a known earth ground (metal waterpipe, conduit, etc.) to all exposed metal parts of the unit (antennas, handle bracket, metal cabinet, screwheads, metallic overlays, control shafts, etc.), especially any exposed metal parts that offer an electrical return path to the chassis. Any current measured must not exceed 0.5 milliamp. Reverse the unit power cord plug in the outlet and repeat test. ANY MEASUREMENTS NOT WITHIN THE LIMITS SPECIFIED HEREIN INDICATE A POTENTIAL SHOCK HAZARD THAT MUST BE ELIMINATED BEFORE RETURNING THE UNIT TO THE CUSTOMER. B. Insulation Resistance Test Cold Check-(1) Unplug the power supply and connect a jumper wire between the two prongs of the plug. (2) Turn on the power switch of the unit. (3) Measure the resistance with an ohmmeter between the jumpered AC plug and each exposed metallic cabinet part on the unit. When the exposed metallic part has a return path to the chassis, the reading should be between 1 and 5.2 Megohms. When there is no return path to the chassis, the reading must be "infinite". If it is not within the limits specified, there is the possibility of a shock hazard, and the unit must be repaired and rechecked before it is returned to the customer.

ELECTROSTATIC DISCHARGE SENSITIVE (ESDS) DEVICE HANDLING
This unit contains ESDS devices. We recommend the following precautions when repairing, replacing or transporting ESDS devices: · Perform work at an electrically grounded work station. · Wear wrist straps that connect to the station or heel straps that connect to conductive floor mats. · Avoid touching the leads or contacts of ESDS devices or PC boards even if properly grounded. Handle boards by the edges only. · Transport or store ESDS devices in ESD protective bags, bins, or totes. Do not insert unprotected devices into materials such as plastic, polystyrene foam, clear plastic bags, bubble wrap or plastic trays. 4

1800VI SPECIFICATIONS
Size: 3.5"H (2U) x 19"W x 13.25"D 89mm x 483mm x 337mm Net: 33 lbs. (15 kg) Shipping weight: 39 lbs. (17.7 kg) 7 LED indicators per channel 1 green - READY, 5 yellow - SIGNAL, 1 red - CLIP/PROTECT 0° to 50° C, up to 85% RH

Weight:

Display:

Operating Temperature:

Performance Specifications
Continuous Average Output Power, both channels driven: 450 Watts per channel into 8 Ohms from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with no more than 0.2% THD 600 Watts per channel into 4 Ohms from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with no more than 0.2% THD Bridged Mono Operation: 1400 Watts into 8 Ohms from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with no more than 0.2% THD 60 V line voltage per channel into 8 Ohms 49 V line voltage per channel into 4 Ohms 1.0 dB nominal 5 Hz to 40 kHz (+0, -3 dB) 20 Hz to 20 kHz (±0.75 dB) > 65 dB @ 1 kHz; > 55 dB @ 10 kHz > 170 25k Ohms unbalanced, each leg to ground, 50k Ohms balanced High: .775 Vrms for rated power into 4 Ohms @ 1 kHz, 57 mVrms for 1W into 4 Ohms @ 1 kHz Low: 1.5 Vrms for rated power into 4 Ohms @ 1 kHz, 116 mVrms for 1W into 4 Ohms @ 1 kHz High: 36.0 dB (±0.5 dB) Low: 30.3 dB (±0.5 dB)

Voltage Output:

Dynamic Headroom: Power Bandwidth: Frequency Response: Channel Separation: Damping Factor: Input Impedance:

*Sensitivity:

*Gain:

*The amplifier sensitivity is set to 0.775V rms for rated output. To reduce the sensitivity by 6 dB to 1.5V rms, remove JP100 (CH1) and JP200 (CH2), located on the main amplifier board.

5

1800VI SPECIFICATIONS
Input Overload: IM Distortion: THD: +18 dBu < 0.1% @ 0.775 V Sensitivity, < 0.2% @ 1.5 V Sensitivity, < 0.1% > 100 dB, A-weighted, referenced to rated power into 4 Ohms (high gain) > 78 dBW, A-weighted, referenced to 1 W into 4 Ohms (high gain) Slew Rate: 10 V/µS (bandwidth limited) 40 V/µS (RFI filtering removed) > 80 dB @ 1 kHz (without Bose® input module) > 60 dB from 20 Hz - 20 kHz (without Bose input module) 55 W at idle 800 W with musical program 1500 W at full power into 8 Ohms (continuous) 2400 W at full power into 4 Ohms (continuous) 120 VAC/50-60 Hz (USA and Canada) 230 VAC/50-60 Hz (Europe/UK) 240 VAC/50-60 Hz (Australia) 100 VAC/50-60 Hz (Japan) 15 Amp Slo-Blo (125 V/60 Hz) 8 Amp Slo-Blo (230 V/50 Hz)

Signal-to-Noise Ratio:

CMRR:

Power Consumption:

Power Requirements:

Fusing:

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1600VI SPECIFICATIONS
Size: 3.5"H (2U) x 19"W x 13.25"D 89mm x 483mm x 337mm Net: 30 lbs. (13.6 kg) Shipping weight: 36 lbs. (16.3 kg) 7 LED indicators per channel 1 green - READY, 5 yellow - SIGNAL, 1 red - CLIP/PROTECT 0° to 50° C, up to 85% RH

Weight:

Display:

Operating Temperature:

Performance Specifications
Continuous Average Output Power, both channels driven: 240 Watts per channel into 8 Ohms from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with no more than 0.2% THD 325 Watts per channel into 4 Ohms from 20 Hz to 20 kHz, with no more than 0.2% THD Bridged Mono Operation: 700 Watts into 8 Ohms at 1 kHz, with no more than 0.2% THD 43.8 V line voltage per channel into 8 Ohms 36.0 V line voltage per channel into 4 Ohms 2.0 dB nominal 5 Hz to 40 kHz (+0, -3 dB) 20 Hz to 20 kHz (±0.75 dB) > 65 dB @ 1 kHz; > 55 dB @ 10 kHz 25k Ohms unbalanced, each leg to ground, 50k Ohms balanced High: 0.775 Vrms for rated power into 4 Ohms, 83 mVrms for 1 W into 4 Ohms Low: 1.5 Vrms for rated power into 4 Ohms, 160 mVrms for 1 W into 4 Ohms @ 1 kHz High: 33.3 dB (±0.5 dB) Low: 27.6 dB (±0.5 dB)

Voltage Output:

Dynamic Headroom: Power Bandwidth: Frequency Response: Channel Separation: Input Impedance:

*Sensitivity:

*Gain:

*The amplifier sensitivity is set to 0.775V rms for rated output. To reduce the sensitivity by 6 dB to 1.5V rms, remove JP100 (CH1) and JP200 (CH2), located on the main amplifier board.

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1600VI SPECIFICATIONS
Input Overload: IM Distortion: THD: +18 dBu < 0.1% @ 0.775 V Sensitivity, < 0.2% @ 1.5 V Sensitivity, < 0.1% > 100 dB, A-weighted, referenced to rated power into 4 Ohms (high gain) > 78 dBW, A-weighted, referenced to 1 W into 4 Ohms (high gain) Slew Rate: CMRR: 40 V/µS (bandwidth limited) > 80 dB @ 1 kHz (without Bose® input module) > 60 dB from 20 Hz - 20 kHz (without Bose input module) 45 W at idle 500 W with musical program 1000 W at full power into 8 Ohms (continuous) 1550 W at full power into 4 Ohms (continuous) 120 VAC/50-60 Hz (USA and Canada) 230 VAC/50-60 Hz (Europe/UK) 240 VAC/50-60 Hz (Australia) 100 VAC/50-60 Hz (Japan) 10 Amp Slo-Blo (125V/60Hz) 7 Amp Slo-Blo (230V/50Hz)

Signal-to-Noise Ratio:

Power Consumption:

Power Requirements:

Fusing:

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H AC N Sequence Send Rcv Line Filter

Fuse

Sequence
(230V) Only On/Off Standby

Power Supplies

Commutation Control (Class H)

CH 2 CH 1

Figure 1. 1600VI and 1800VI Block Diagram

Regulation (not used with 1600VI) Phase Control

Amplifier
CH 1

CH 2 Sequence Control Input Module Level Control

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CH 1 Input CH 2

Lowpass Filter

CH 1 OUT

CH 2 OUT

CH 1

CH 2 Display Bose ® EQ Card(s)

Temperature Sense Protection Display Drive

Output Relays Fan Drive

CH 1 OUT CH 2 OUT

THEORY OF OPERATION
1. General The Bose® Model 1600VI and 1800VI Professional Stereo Power Amplifiers are two-channel, installed/portable amplifiers made for professional sound applications. The 1600VI is rated at 240 Watts into 8 Ohms and 325 Watts into 4 Ohms. In the bridged-mono setting it can deliver 700 Watts. The 1800VI is rated at 450 Watts into 8 Ohms and 600 Watts into 4 Ohms. In the bridged-mono setting it can deliver 1400 Watts. The protection circuits designed into the amplifiers will protect them from unexpected faults, excessive temperature, continuous current limiting and shorted outputs. The balanced inputs use high quality, high common-mode rejection differential amplifiers for exceptional hum and noise rejection. Through the use of equalization cards the amplifier can provide active equalization for Bose 402TM, 502®A, 502B, 802®, Model 25/32, Model 8, Model 1B and FreeSpace® 360 professional loudspeakers. These cards fit into the J6, Channel 1 and J7, Channel 2 connectors located on the Input Module motherboard or the Bose ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module. Additional Features are as follows: · Two input connectors per channel allow 1/4" TRS, XLR, or quick connect terminal block connection · Two input connectors for each channel are wired in parallel · Accepts balanced or unbalanced lines · Independent CH 1 and CH 2 Level Controls with 11 detented positions · Level Control Defeat Switch · Dual Mono Mode for combining the power of both channels into a single higher powered channel · Sequencer connection for sequentially powering-up multiple amplifiers to limit instantaneous in-rush current · Bi-Amp/Full Range configurable · Internally configurable for Parallel Mono mode for single channel low impedance operation · Internally configurable for 0.775V or 1.5V rms input sensitivity · Internally configurable input polarity of XLR connectors · Class H dual-rail power supply · Additional protection circuitry includes Clipping Eliminator, AC Lines Fuse · Power Connected/Standby Indicator · 7 LED display per channel, including power ready and Clip/Protect indicators · Two-speed fan cooled 2. Circuit Descriptions This section discusses the theory of operation of the 1600VI and 1800VI Amplifiers. For a better understanding of the circuitry involved, refer to the schematics included with this manual. Component pin designation is notated as follows: U1-7 means U1 at pin 7. Unless otherwise noted, this discussion centers around the CH 1 circuitry. The CH 2 circuitry is essentially identical.

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THEORY OF OPERATION
2.1 Input Module Note: Some amplifiers will be equipped with the Bose® ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module in place of the Bose Input Module. This module retains all of the capabilities of the Bose Input Module, except sequence (see section 2.8), and includes the ability to control and monitor the amplifier over a control network. Refer to the ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module service manual, part number 199746 for more information. The Input Module consists of signal input connections, mode switching, optional equalization, and power sequencing circuitry. The module operates from +15V and -15V, supplied by the host amplifier through J2-2 and J2-1 respectively. The signal inputs are designed for balanced connection, though unbalanced inputs can be configured by proper input wiring. Channel 1 (CH1) line-level inputs are made via P4 and J4, Channel 2 (CH2) input connections are made via P1 and J5. P4 and P1 allow for the insertion of either male XLR or phone plugs. The phone plug terminations are: tip positive (+), ring negative (-), and sleeve ground. The XLR connections pins 2 and 3 are user configurable. As shipped, jumper blocks JB2 and JB1 have jumpers between pins 2 to 3 and 5 to 6. This jumper configuration assigns XLR pin 2 to positive (+) and pin 3 to negative (-), pin 1 is ground in all configurations. If the jumpers are placed across JB1/JB2 pins 1 to 2 and 4 to 5 the XLR pin assignment becomes pin 2 negative (-), and pin 3 positive (+). The Euro-block terminal block connectors J4 and J5 assignments are: pin 1 positive (+), pin 2 negative (-), and pin 3 ground. The CH1 input signal is applied to ICs U1, and the CH2 signal to U2. U1 and U2 are unity gain (0 dB) differential amplifiers (SSM2141). These inputs are protected against RFI (Radio Frequency Interference) and ESD (Electro-Static Discharge). The signals are then routed to the A inputs of op-amp/switch ICs (BA3128) U4 (CH1) and U3 (CH2) and to EQ card connectors J6-4 and J7-4 respectively. The switch's B inputs are driven by the output of the EQ cards via J6-5 and J7-5. The input module detects the presence of EQ cards via J7-6 and J6-6. Without the card installed these pins are pulled high (+15V) which keeps both CH1 and CH2 sections of dual LED D23 extinguished. This logic high signal is also applied to the control pins of the switch ICs which selects the A (unequalized) input. When an EQ is plugged into J7 and/or J6 pin 6 the EQ is detected and pulls the control pin low (+7.5V), turning on the corresponding LED(s) and switching the IC to the B input which selects the output of the EQ card. On some EQ cards the equalization can be modified for either full range "FULL BANDWIDTH" or bi-amplified "HF ONLY" operation. The equalization mode switch SW2 selects either FULL BANDWIDTH or HF ONLY modes of the EQ cards installed. These control signals are sent to the EQ cards via J6-7, 8 and J7-7, 8. The selected signals from U4 and U3 are buffered by U7B and U7A which are wired to P2 and P3. These phone connectors provide balanced, buffered, equalized outputs (if an EQ card is installed) to drive additional amplifiers or other equipment. This allows external equipment to provide equalized signals without the need for additional equalization. The pin assignment for these connectors are the same as for the input phone connectors P1B and P4B. The output circuitry is also protected from RFI and EMI. The amplifier can be operated in four different output modes: normal (two independent channels) dual mono (one input channel, two separate channels), bridged mono, or parallel mono. These modes are selected via SW1 and control the operation of op-amp/switching ICs U6 and U5. Parallel mono operation requires internal modifications to the amplifier, contact the local Bose Pro Product dealer for information on parallel mono operation. 11

THEORY OF OPERATION
When SW1 is set to the NORMAL mode, CH1 and CH2 operate independently. In this mode a logic high is applied to the control pins of U6 and U5. This routes the outputs of U4 and U3 to their respective channels in the amplifier via J1-20 and J1-16. In DUAL MONO mode both amplifier channels are driven by the signal applied to the CH2 input. U6-1 is driven high (+15V) and U5-1 is driven low (+7.5V), selecting CH2 to drive both channels of the amplifier. In BRIDGED MONO operation the CH2 signal is routed directly from the equalizer switch U3 to the amplifier inputs. U5 control pin 1 is driven low (+7.5V) selecting the inverting input of the op-amp switching IC signal. This inverting signal is then sent to the B input of U6 whose control signal at pin 1 is driven low selecting the B input. This routes the inverted signal to the CH1 input of the amplifier. For information on sequence operation see Section 2.8, Sequence Send/Receive. 2.2 Power Amplifier Circuitry The 1600VI and 1800VI amplifiers use a conventional class AB push-pull power amplifier circuit, with a commutated two-stage (dual-rail, class H) power supply. U100A-1 is the input stage, providing differential inputs for input and feedback connections as well as most of the open-loop voltage gain of the circuit. Local and global negative feedback from the output stage via R109, R113, R111/ R112 and R129 sets the closed-loop gain at 33.3 dB for the 1600VI and 36.0 dB for the 1800VI. Removing jumper JP100 disconnects R111 from the circuit and sets the closed-loop gain at 27.6 dB for the 1600VI and 30.3 dB for the 1800VI. The factory default settings are 33.3 dB for the 1600VI gain and 36.0 dB for the 1800VI gain. The output of U100A-1 drives Q100 and Q101, operating as common emitters that level-shift the drive signal and couple it to the pre-driver amplifiers Q102 and Q103. Q102 and Q103 provide additional voltage gain, and when combined with the voltage gain of the input op-amp is sufficient to swing the input signal between the +90V/1600VI and +106V/1800VI power supply rails. Q104 and Q122 are connected as an NPN-PNP conjugate pair and used as a VBE multiplier for bias control. Q104 is thermally connected to the output transistors and together with Q122 provides bias stabilization over a wide temperature range. R124 allows the bias current to be adjusted to its optimum value. The predrivers Q102 and Q103 provide the base current to the drivers Q108 and Q109. These drive the output transistors; Q110, Q112, Q114, Q116, Q118 and Q120 for the positive half-cycle, and Q111, Q113, Q115, Q117, Q119 and Q121 for the negative half-cycle. Note: Output transistors Q112, 118, 212 and 218, along with the corresponding channel 2 output transistors Q113, 119, 213, 219, are not used in the 1600VI amplifier. Q105 operates as a V-I limiter, sensing the voltage drop across emitter resistor R148 (Q106 across R149 for the negative side), and reducing the drive signal to the output stage under overload conditions (see Section 3.1 Over-Current Protection for more information). From the Amplifier Board, the signal passes to the Output Board via E100 (E200 for CH 2). R100, L100, R110 and C100 on the Output PCB comprise the output pole circuit for amplifier stabilization.

12

THEORY OF OPERATION
2.3 Output Relays Note: Refer to the Output PCB schematic for the following. Relay K100 is used to connect the output signal to the Speaker Output Binding Posts through J1. The CH1 and CH2 (K100 and K200) output relays are energized independantly of each other. In CH1, immediately after the power switch is turned on, +6 Vdc is applied to terminal 2 of D105 (ready LED) on the display board via the voltage divider formed by R112/R113. Terminal 1 of D105 is connected to pin 6 of K100 via J3-8 and J6-5 on the I/O board. A small amount of current is drawn through R102 and the relay coil, which is enough to illuminate the red LED portion of D105 but not enough to activate the relay. In the meantime, C13 begins to charge through R26 on the I/O board, which delays turning on Q2 and Q3 by a few seconds. When Q3 turns on, VLF+ is applied to pin 6 of K100 which activates the relay. VLF+ is also applied to terminal 1 of D105, which reverse biases the red LED and D107, and forward biases the green LED, drawing current from ground through R112. 2.4 Magnetic Field Power Supply When the power switch is OFF (S1 across E1 and E2) and the linecord is connected to an AC voltage, D1 illuminates (Standby LED). When the power switch is turned ON (S1 across E2 and E3), the LED goes off and gate voltage is applied to triac Q1, which turns it on and energizes the transformer primary winding. The secondary winding of the power transformer has two taps that supply the two pairs of DC supply voltages, ±90 Vdc and ±45 Vdc for the 1600VI and ±106 Vdc and ±53 Vdc for the 1800VI, each having its own bridge rectifier and filter capacitors. The ±15 Vdc is tapped from the ±53 Vdc for the 1800VI and the ±45 Vdc for the 1600VI through R6 and R8, and regulated by Q2, Q3 and zener diodes D3 and D6. The ±15 Vdc supply powers the op-amps and smallsignal transistors. Note: Refer to the Regulator Board schematic diagram for the following. The Regulator Board is not used on the 1600VI. In the 1800VI, the triac Q1 drives the primary of the magnetic field power transformer by operating as a phase controlled switch; its gate signal depends on the signal supplied to opto-isolator U3 located on the regulator board. U4B provides steering for the photodiac in U3, allowing the triac to fire on both alternations of the power line. U2 on the Regulator Board provides AC to DC conversion, with the AC line voltage providing the input to the converter through limit resistors R3 and R4, and the 12.5 Vdc output determined by feedback resistor R6. This voltage provides the positive supply for U4, DC reference for comparators U4C and U4D, and the current through opto-isolator U1 which sets the voltage for the voltage-to-current converter U4A. Note that U4 (MC3405) is a dual op-amp and dual-voltage comparator in a singe package (U4A/U4B are op-amps and U4C/U4D are open collector comparators). 2.5 Start-up Sequence (1800VI only) When the power switch is OFF (S1 across E1 and E2) and the linecord is connected to an AC voltage, D1 illuminates (STANDBY LED). When the power switch is turned ON (S1 across E2 and E3), the LED goes off and AC HI is supplied to the Regulator Board.

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THEORY OF OPERATION
D2 and D3 on the Regulator Board provide overvoltage protection to U4. U4B-14 is a full-wave rectifier that outputs positive pulses to comparator U4C. The reference voltage is set at 0.7Vdc by R10 at pin 3. Where pin 2 crosses the threshold, the output of U4C-1 goes open and C6 begins to charge through R21 and U4A-8. U4A is a voltage-to-current converter (Howland current pump), whose output current is determined by the voltage at the junction of R12 and R13. As the voltage increases, the charging current to C6 increases. The voltage on C6 is connected to comparator U4D-6. The reference voltage is set at 0.7Vdc by R22 at pin 5. When pin 6 crosses the threshold, the output of U4D-7 goes open and base current is supplied to Q1 through R14. Q1 turns on, and current flows through the LED portion of U3, illuminating it and turning on the diac. This applies voltage to the gate of triac Q1 on the Power Supply Board which fires it and allows it to conduct current through the primary side of the power transformer. When the output of U4B-14 drops below the threshold voltage of U4C-3, U4C-1 goes low and C6 discharges rapidly through it. When the voltage on C6 drops below the threshold voltage of U4D-5, U4D-7 goes low and Q1 and U3 turn off, removing the gate voltage to the triac momentarily interrupting the current through the primary side of the transformer. The triac is switched on and off every half-cycle of the 60Hz AC line. Thus, the triac switches the AC line current off at a rate twice the line frequency, at the instant the line current crosses the zero axis. The triac will then remain off for a number of degrees of the sinusoid, before switching on again. The phase angle at which the triac switches on is the "firing angle" of the triac. This produces enough voltage to the primary of the power transformer to allow the secondary regulator stage to begin to operate. 2.6 Power Supply Regulation (1800VI only) The firing angle of the triac controls the voltage on the primary of the transformer, and is determined by the conduction of the optocoupler U3 on the Regulator Board. As the conduction of the optocoupler increases, so does the conduction angle of the triac. The photodiac conduction of the optocoupler is controlled by the current through the LED portion of the optocoupler, the amount of current through the LED is equal to the amount of current through transistor Q1. When the LED in U3 is fully ON, the triac conducts earliest in the AC cycle: the power supply is operating at maximum output. The LED current is supplied by voltage regulator U2 on the Regulator PCB. U5A differential amplifier senses the secondary supply voltages through R37 and R38. The output voltage at U5A-1 increases at the rate determined by R30 and C8 (slow start-up). The idle secondary voltages are set by R36 on the Regulator Board . 2.7 Load Regulation (1800VI only) When the amplifier is driven at high power into a load, the high DC supplies (rail voltages) will begin to "sag". Differential amplifier U5A-1 senses this and increases the LED current to optocoupler U1. This action increases the phototransistor conduction, which increases the output current of U4-8, increasing the charging rate on C6. This ultimately increases the triac conduction which increases the primary voltage, which increases the secondary voltages, thus providing steady, regulated DC supplies for the amplifier stage.

14

THEORY OF OPERATION
The -15Vdc supplied to U5A-4 is backed up with a voltage divider off the -106Vdc supply (R26/ R27). Without this, if the -15Vdc supply should fail for some reason, the output of U5A-1 would go high, drawing maximum current through the LED in U1 and latching the triac into full conduction. To prevent this, D8 will become forward biased and supply negative DC to U5A-4, keeping it operating normally. Note that if the +15Vdc supply should fail, the output of U5A-1 would go negative, turning off the triac. 2.8 Sequence Send/Receive The amplifier can be powered up while the power switch is in the OFF position by applying a DC control voltage of +7V to +15V to the Sequence RCV terminal. Q3 on the Input Module Board will turn on and carry the control voltage through to the SND terminal, which is connected to the next amplifier in the sequential chain. Q1 also turns on which turns on Q2, providing enough current to pass through the LED portion of optocoupler U1 on the Power Supply Board to illuminate it and turn on the diac. This provides a gate voltage to fire triac Q1, which powers up the primary circuit. Once the secondary voltages are up, the +15Vdc supply keeps the Receive circuit operating. 2.9 Commutators Under idle or small-signal conditions, the low-rail voltage is applied to the collectors of the output transistors through D13 and D19 on the Power Supply Board. The output of the amplifier is connected to the Power Supply Board via J1-10/J2-10. The signal is half-wave rectified by D7 and D14, sending the positive half of the signal to comparator U2A-1 and the negative half to comparator U2B-7. When the signal level exceeds the threshold of the comparator, Q4 (positive) or Q10 (negative) turns on. Current can now flow from ground through Q8 which acts as a current source for Q6. Q6 or Q11 turn on providing gate drive to the power FET Q9 (positive) or Q14 (negative). When the FETs turn on, the high-rail voltage is connected to the collectors of the output transistors. D13 and D19 become reversed biased and switch off the low-rail voltage from the circuit. Zener diodes D11 and D18 provide gate protection to the FETs. Q7 and Q12 speed up the turn off time of the FETs. This two-stage approach minimizes the voltage across each of the output devices which also minimizes the power dissipation required. Without this approach, the output transistors would be required to support the entire power supply voltage under small-signal conditions and the "unused" portion of the power supply voltage would be turned into heat. 2.10 Display Circuit In addition to the READY LEDs discussed in section 2.3 (Output Relays), the Display Board contains five SIGNAL LEDs and one CLIP/PROTECT LED per channel. The clipping indicators are driven by transistors Q100 (CH1), and Q200 (CH2) located on the Display Board. The signal for the clipping indicators initially comes from U100A-1 and U100B-7 on the Amplifier Board. This is the same signal that operates the anti-clipping opto-isolator on the I/O Board. D30 on the I/O Board half-wave rectifies the positive-going portion of the signal and drives comparator U9B which is a switch. C9 and R62 establish the time constant of the clipping indicator. D23 rectifies the negative-going portion and also drives comparator U9B. When clipping occurs, U9B-7 changes from positive to negative, which forward biases D100 on the Display Board and turns on Q100. Q100 supplies current for clipping LED D104, causing it to illuminate.

15

THEORY OF OPERATION
The output signal is sensed at the speaker output via the I/O Board (J2-3 Output Board to J6-3 I/O Board to J3-6 I/O Board to J1-6 Display Board). D22 half-wave rectifies the signal and provides a DC voltage proportional to the amplifier's output to drive the signal display circuit. C2 and R19 determine the response characteristics of the display. The signal driver circuit comprised of U1-U4 is basically a ladder comparator driving LEDs, with a twist. Assume that the signal at U2A-3 is zero volts (ignore R24 and D23 for now). R13 and R14 are a voltage divider that establishes a reference voltage for the comparators (four per channel). The comparators compare this reference voltage against the voltages established by the tapped voltage divider made up of R22, R20, R15 and R25. The CH1 LEDs are in the following sequence (lowest to highest): D105 (red/ green), D13 (amber), D15 (amber), D14 (amber), D12 (amber), D11 (amber), and D104 (red). With the input at zero volts, all of the comparator outputs are at -12V, except for U2B-7 which is high. None of the signal LEDs have any voltage across them, all are extinguished. As the input signal rises, it crosses in sequence at the thresholds established at each of the four comparators. First U2A-1 fires; its output goes high and D13 illuminates. Next U1B-7 fires, its output goes high, D13 extinguishes (no net voltage across it) and D15 illuminates. Finally U1A1 fires, D15 extinguishes, and (this is the twist) D23/R24 supply current to the bottom of the R15, R20, R22 and R25 voltage divider, which inverts the relationship of the comparators to each other. When U1A-1 fires, the current through R24 reverses the sequence of the voltages that establish the thresholds for the three comparators. This allows the same comparators to perform double-duty. The new thresholds leave U1A-1 high, U2B-7 low, U2A-1 and U1B-7 low and D14 on. D11 and D12 are off. As the input signal rises further, U1B-7 fires, extinguishing D14 and illuminating D12. Next U2A-1 fires, extinguishing D12 and illuminating D11. Finally U2B-7 fires, extinguishing D11. The last LED is the clipping indicator, D104.

3.0 Protection Circuitry
Protection functions are provided that will deactivate the output relays. Protection is provided for the following fault conditions: 3.1 Over-Current Protection The amplifiers are protected from short-term excess current through the output stage by electronic current limiters. When the current through the output transistors becomes excessive, the voltage drop across the emitter resistors R148 and R149 bias the current limiter transistors Q105 and Q106 on, which shunt the drive current via D106 and D107. R139, D102, R140 and D103 determine the V-I limits. When the current-limiters turn on, the voltage at voltage divider R127/R128 becomes less positive, providing base current for Q1 on the I/O Board through R38. When Q1 turns on two things happen; current flows through U3 (LED/LDR module) via D31 which attenuates the input signal, removing the high current condition as well as providing base current to Q5 through D1 which turns off Q2 and Q3, causing the relay to disengage. C13 provides a time delay to prevent the relay from disengaging during momentary program peaks. When the relay disengages, it causes the red LED in D105 (READY LED) to illuminate and also turns on Q100 and D104 (CLIP/PROTECT LED).

16

THEORY OF OPERATION
3.2 Clipping Eliminator Circuit This circuit is controlled by the LED/LDR opto-isolator U3, located on the I/O Board. The LED portion of this component is driven from a bridge rectifier (D4) that gets its input signal from U100A-1 on the Amplifier Board. Under normal conditions (undistorted amplifier output) there is almost no signal at this point. If the amplifier is driven into clipping, the signal level at U100A-1 rises rapidly because the feedback signal no longer represents the input signal. Once this occurs, the LED in U3 illuminates, reducing the resistance of the LDR portion which in turn reduces the input signal. The clipping-eliminator circuit is activated by switch S2B on the I/O Board. When the switch is off, the signal driving the bridge rectifier is shorted to ground. 3.3 DC Offset DC offset is sensed by the comparator amplifier U2A on the I/O Board. If a DC component should appear at the output, it is sensed through either D6 or D7, depending on its polarity. The output of U2A-1 will switch from -14Vdc to +14Vdc, which turns on Q5 via D8. This deactivates the relay, turns the READY LED red, and turns on the CLIP/PROTECT LED. In addition, the output of U2A-1 is conveyed to the Regulator Board via D15, J100-10 to Regulator Board J1-12 and D9. The positive voltage on U5A-2 causes the output of U5A-1 to become less positive, shutting off the conduction current through optocoupler U1, which shuts off the triac and primary current. Note: The Regulator PCB is not used in the 1600VI amplifier. 3.4 Overheated Output Transistors A thermistor (RT100) is positioned near the amplifier PCB's heatsink. As the negative coefficient thermistor heats up, the voltage on comparator U2B-6 located on the I/O PCB drops. When it crosses the reference voltage set up by voltage divider R42/R43, U2B-7 goes positive. This forward biases D17, turning on Q5, which deactivates relay K100. As the heatsink temperature cools, the thermistor will cool until the voltage at U2B-6 once again crosses the reference voltage at U2B-5, allowing the relay to reactivate. 3.4 Fan Speed Control The fan operates at low speed when the amplifier is first turned on. The voltage at the thermistor is connected to the Fan Drive circuit on the Output Board via D16 (on the I/O Board) and J6-4/J2-4. As the heatsink temperature increases, the voltage at U1A-3 on the Output Board decreases until it crosses the threshold set by voltage divider R4 and R6. When this occurs, the output of U1A-1 toggles low, which turns on Q1. Q1 shorts across R1 and applies the full VF+ voltage to the fan, kicking it into high speed. 3.5 Major Faults The slo-blo line fuse protects the unit from further damage when a major fault such as a shorted output transistor or a secondary power supply fault occurs. If the unit is run at or near its rated power, the fuse will eventually blow. The rated line fuse allows the unit to be operated without interruption for all musical applications.

17

THEORY OF OPERATION
4.0 Operating Modes The Bose® 1600VI and 1800VI amplifiers are capable of being configured to operate in several different modes in order to allow greater flexibility in use. 4.1 Bridged Mono/Dual Mono Switching The Stereo/Mono Switch (S1) on the Input Board is a three-position switch used to select Normal Stereo, Bridged Mono or Dual Mono operation. In the Bridged Mono position, it connects CH 1 in parallel with the CH 2 input, but inverts the signal to CH 1. The CH 1 input connection becomes disabled. The speaker output signals are identical except CH 1 is 180 degrees out of phase. In this way, a single speaker can be connected between the two "+" speaker terminals and receive twice the voltage as a single channel. When connected in this way, each channel "sees" one-half the impedance of the speaker that is connected between them. If an 8 ohm speaker is used, each channel will see a 4 ohm load. The result is twice the rated power (per channel) into twice the rated impedance. Note: Each channel can still be independently controlled with its own level control so it is important that both level controls be set to the same position for a balanced output. When S1 is switched to the Dual Mono position, CH 1 is connected in parallel with the CH 2 input, but in phase. The CH 1 input connection becomes disabled. This allows both channels to be driven with the same signal without the use of special patch cords. Each channel can still be independently controlled with its own level control. 4.2 Parallel Mono To operate in Parallel Mono mode, leave S1 in the Normal Stereo position. Removing jumpers JP201 and JP203 will disconnect the CH 2 predrivers from the output stage. Installing jumpers JP102, JP104, JP202 and JP204 will connect the CH 1 predrivers to the CH 2 output stage. In this way, both channels will operate at exactly the same level, and will be controlled by the CH 1 level control. In addition, removing JP1 will prevent the CH 2 clip LED from activating, and installing a 16 ga. jumper wire between WL100 and WL200 on the Output Board will tie both amplifier outputs together before the relays. When operating in parallel mono, either of the speaker output terminals (CH 1 or CH 2) can be used since they both have exactly the same signal present. When a speaker is connected to the output terminals it can be driven with twice the current capacity of a single channel. The result is twice the rated power (per channel) into half the rated impedance.

18

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
Note: It's advisable to mark or note wiring configuration before any disassembly begins. For more information refer to the Wiring Diagrams Figures 19 and 20. Note: Refer to Figures 2, 3 and 4 for the following procedures. 1. Cover Removal 1.1 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove seven screws (3) from the back and sides of the chassis cover (1) and the two longer screws that are located in the center behind the rack-mount brackets. See Figure 2. 1.2 Lift the back of the cover up, while moving it forward (front panel) from the chassis (2). The front lip of the cover is hinged on the two front angle pieces of the chassis. 2. Cover Replacement 2.1 Align the cover (1) so its front angle fits over the chassis. 2.2 Secure the cover to the chassis by tightening seven screws (3) and the two longer screws located in the center behind the rack-mount brackets with a phillipshead screwdriver. See Figure 2. Note: Refer to Figure 6 for the following procedures. 3. Display Board Removal 3.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 3.2 Remove the connectors from transformer (4) terminals 6-11. This will give you access to the screw on the display board (5) which is next to the transformer. 3.3 Remove two screws (20) on the solder side of the display board with a phillipshead screwdriver. 3.4 Move the board back from the chassis front panel and disconnect the wiring harness from the display board J1 connector. 3.5 Lift the board out from the chassis. 4. Display Board Replacement 4.1 Connect the wiring harness from the I/O board (6) to the display board (5) J1 connector. 4.2 Secure the display board to the chassis standoffs by tightening two screws (20) with a phillips-head screwdriver.

Remove these screws

front Side View

rear

Do not remove these screws
Figure 2. Cover Removal Screw Location Side View 19

1 Cover

Qty 3 3

FOR BRIDGED OPERATIONS CONSULT OWNERS MANUAL

1800 SERIES V PROFESSIONAL AMPLIFIER
D.O.M.

BRIDGED 1400 W 8

BOSE CORPORATION, FRAMINGHAM, MA 01701-9168 MADE IN U.S.A. LICENSED UNDER U.S. PAT. NO. 4,484,150

700 W 4

700 W 4

CAUTION WARNING

AVIS - CH 2 + + CH 1 SPEAKER OUTPUTS

AC 100V 50-60Hz 1800 W

2 Chassis Qty 3 3

TO REDUCE THE RISK OF FIRE OR ELECTRIC SHOCK DO NOT EXPOSE THIS EQUIPMENT TO RAIN OR MOISTURE.

Qty 3 3

CLASS 1 WIRING SHALL BE USED

Figure 3. Cover Attaching Hardware
Attaches I/O Board 11 3 Attaches Heatsink Brackets, Item 22 3 Attaches 11 I/O Board 3 Attaches Heatsink Brackets, Item 22

20
Input 17 Module 3

FOR BRIDGED OPERATIONS CONSULT OWNERS MANUAL

1800 SERIES V PROFESSIONAL AMPLIFIER
D.O.M.

BRIDGED 1400 W 8

BOSE CORPORATION, FRAMINGHAM, MA 01701-9168 MADE IN U.S.A. LICENSED UNDER U.S. PAT. NO. 4,484,150

700 W 4

700 W 4

CAUTION WARNING

AVIS - CH 2 + + CH 1 SPEAKER OUTPUTS

AC 100V 50-60Hz 1800 W

2 Chassis

TO REDUCE THE RISK OF FIRE OR ELECTRIC SHOCK DO NOT EXPOSE THIS EQUIPMENT TO RAIN OR MOISTURE.

CLASS 1 WIRING SHALL BE USED

3 Fan Exhaust Slot 3 Attaches Input Qty 2 Module 3 Qty 2 Attaches Lower Fan Shield Attaches 11 Output Board 36

Figure 4. Rear View - Attaching Hardware

Sequence Switch

9

53

Power Switch

LOAD

LINE

10

Figure 5. 240V Configuration

240V Line Filter

5 Display Board 45
Qty 2

100V and 120V Configuration 35 4

32 Fuse Holder

47

Qty 2

20

Qty 2

R101

J1

Front Panel Hinge
R102

20

Qty 2

Nylon Standoff Display Board 50 Wiring Harness 6 7 8 9 10 11 2 1 Transformer 5 3 4
LOAD LINE

9 Power Switch Board

Nylon Clamp Anchors C4-C7 21 Capacitors Power Supply 7 Board

10 Line Filter

A

A J1

44

Qty 2

Cover

1

8 Regulator Board Nylon Standoff Power Supply Board Terminals WL1-WL3 and WL5-WL7

Attaches Transistors to Heatsink, Item 18 29
Qty 28

Large Ribbon Cable

Amplifier 15 Board

16 Output Board Terminals WL1, WL2, WL100, WL101, WL200 and WL201

3 I/O Board J3 Connector 6 I/O Board

Qty 6

Shield Over 19 Q214 and Q216

48 31

I/O Board J100 and J200 Connectors

Figure 6. 1600VI and 1800VI Amplifier Assembly 21

4 Qty 4 13 14 T1 2 6 Yellow Blu 2

9

7 Red Wht 1

32 LINE 8 Black 9 Black Gray 3 Vio 5 11 12 Qty 2 10 FL1 12 Qty 2 10 Red LOAD E1 11 Yellow Brn 4 33 34 F1

51

40

Qty 2 13 11 Qty 2 43 J1

Figure 7. Bottom Mounted Components
I/O Board Ribbon Cable Input Module J1 Connector Fan 23 B1 27 Upper Shield 28 12 Qty 4 26 Lower Shield 24 25 Binding Post Terminal Plug 14 Qty 4 31 P1

22

37

Part of I/O Board

I/O Board 2-Pin Harness Connector

41

Qty 4

16 Output Board

37

Output Board J2 Connector

42

Qty 2

Input Module Assembly 17

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
4.3 Connect the power supply cables back to transformer (4) terminals 6-11. 4.4 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. Note: Refer to Figures 3, 4 and 6 for the following procedures. 5. Regulator Board Removal Note: The regulator board is not used in the 1600VI amplifier. 5.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 5.2 Note the wiring configuration and disconnect cables WL1-WL3 and WL5-WL7 from the power supply board (7) terminals. This will allow easier access to the regulator board (8). These terminals are located directly over the regulator board in the 1800VI. 5.3 Disconnect the cables from the terminals of the line filter (10) that are next to the regulator board. 5.4 Remove the transformer (4) using procedure 11. This will allow easier access to the standoffs that secure the regulator to the power supply board. 5.5 Unsnap the regulator board from the nylon standoffs mounted on the power supply board. This will also disengage the regulator board from the power supply J1 connector. 6. Regulator Board Replacement 6.1 Line up and insert the pins of the regulator board (8) J1 connector (solder side) into the power supply (7) J1 connector. 6.4 Connect the cables from the line cord (31) (for 240V, line cord and ground) to the line filters terminals (10). 6.5 Connect the cables to power supply board (7) terminals WL1-WL3 and WL5WL7. These terminals are directly over the regulator board. 6.6 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. Note: Refer to Figures 5 and 6 for the following procedures. 7. Power or Sequence Switch Removal 7.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 7.2 Unsolder the three tabs that secure the power switch board (9) to the switch. 7.3 Push the switch through the chassis (2) front panel. 8. Power or Sequence Switch Replacement 8.1 Push the switch into the chassis (2) front panel. 8.2 Solder the power switch board (9) to the switch terminals. For 100V and 120V units, make sure the LED is lined up with the panel hole labeled "Standby". For 240V units, make sure the board's LED is aligned underneath the "ON" position icon. 8.3 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. 23 6.2 Carefully line up the holes of the regulator board with the nylon standoffs mounted on the power supply board. Snap three corners of the board onto each nylon standoff. 6.3 Replace the transformer (4) using procedure 12. Refer to Figures 7 and16 for correct wire locations.

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
Note: Refer to Figures 5, 6 and 7 for the following procedures. 9. Line Filter Removal 9.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 9.2 Make a note of the wiring configuration of the line filter (10) and disconnect the wires. 9.3 Using a phillips-head screwdriver and a 5/16 wrench, remove the two screws (11) and locknuts (12) that attach the line filter to the chassis (2). The screws are driven from the bottom of the chassis. 9.4 Remove the line filter from the chassis. 10. Line Filter Replacement 10.1 Align the line filter (10) to the chassis (2). Refer to Figures 16 and 17. 10.2 Secure the line filter to the chassis using the two screws (11) and locknuts (12) removed in procedure 9.3. The screws are driven from the bottom of the chassis. 10.3 Connect the cables from the line cord (31) and power supply to the terminals of the line filter. Refer to the Wiring Diagrams Figures 19 and 20. 10.4 Replace the cover using procedure 2. Note: Refer to Figure 7 for the following procedures. 11. Transformer Removal 11.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 11.2 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect all of the connectors attached to the transformer (4) terminals. 11.3 Place the chassis (2) on its side. 11.4 While holding the transformer with one hand, use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove four screws (13) and washers (14) from the bottom of the chassis. 11.5 Remove the transformer from the chassis. 12. Transformer Replacement 12.1 Place the chassis (2) on its side. Align the transformer (4) in the chassis so that the six terminal side of the transformer is next to the large capacitors of the power supply board (7). 12.2 While holding the transformer with one hand, use a phillips-head screwdriver to tighten four screws (13) and washers (14) from the bottom of the chassis. 12.3 Return the cables to their designated terminals on the transformer. Refer to the Wiring Diagrams, Figures 19 and 20 for proper hookup. 12.4 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. Note: Refer to Figures 6 and 7 for the following procedures. 13. Amplifier Board Removal 13.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 13.2 Disconnect the two ribbon cables connected to the I/O board (6), J101 and J201, from the amplifier board (15). 13.3 Disconnect the large ribbon cable JP200 from the power supply board (7). 13.4 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect the cables connected to terminals WL1, WL2, WL100, WL101, WL200 and WL201 on the output board (16).

24

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
Note: Some cables are bundled together. Cut any wire wraps when necessary. 13.5 Note the locations of RT100, RT200, Q104 and Q204 at the corners of the amplifier board and their placement against the heatsink. 13.6 Remove one screw (29) and washer from each of the twenty-eight transistors that attaches the amplifier board to the heatsink (18). Note: Make a note of the location and alignment of the shield over Q214 and Q216. 13.7 Lift the amplifier board from the heatsink. 14. Amplifier Board Replacement 14.1 Place the amplifier board (15) onto the heatsink (18). Align the board so that the large ribbon cable is facing the power supply board (7). Be sure that RT100, RT200, Q104 and Q204 are aligned properly against the heatsink and that they have sufficient heatsink compound between the component and the heatsink. 14.2 Secure the amplifier board to the heatsink by tightening one screw (29) and washer to each of the power transistors. Torque the screws to 5.7 inch-pounds. Note: Make sure the shield (19) is attached to Q214 and Q216 transistors. Refer to Figure 6 for shield alignment. 14.3 Connect the two ribbon cables J101 and J201 to I/O board (6) connectors, J100 and J200). 14.4 Connect the large ribbon cable (JP200) to the power supply board (7) connector J2. 15.3 Disconnect the amplifier board (15) two ribbon cables from the I/O board J100 and J200 connectors. 15.4 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect the cables connected to the output board (16) WL1, WL2, WL100, WL200 and WL201 terminals. 15.5 If necessary, unsolder the red and white wires from the I/O board E10 and E11 terminals. They are located near the amplifier board transistor shield (19). 15.6 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect the cables from the power supply WL1-WL8 terminals. WL8 is located near the large power supply capacitors. 15.7 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect all of the cables connected to the transformer. 15.8 Using a phillips-head screwdriver, remove one screw from the nylon clamp (21) that fastens the power supply capacitors (7) C4-C7 to the chassis (2). 14.5 Connect the amplifier and power supply board (7) cables to the output board (16) WL1, WL2, WL100, WL101, WL200 and WL201 terminals. Refer to Wiring Diagram Figure 19. 14.6 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. Note: Refer to Figures 7, 8 and 9 for the following procedures. 15. Output Board Removal 15.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 15.2 Disconnect the display board (5) wiring harness from the I/O board (6) J3 connector.

25

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
15.9 Using a phillips-head screwdriver, remove four screws (29) from the two brackets (22) that secure the heatsink (18) to the inside of the chassis back panel. 15.10 To release the heatsink base from the bottom of the chassis, use a phillipshead screwdriver to remove four screws (3) from the chassis bottom panel. Move the entire heatsink away from the output board. 15.11 Disconnect the fan (23) from the output board J3 connector. 15.12 Disconnect the I/O board ribbon cable from the output board J2 connector. 15.13 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove two screws (11) that fasten the output board to the bottom of the chassis. 15.14 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove two screws (11) on the back panel that attach to the two brackets on the output board. They are located underneath the red and black binding posts. 15.15 Use a wrench to remove four nuts from the binding posts (items 24 or 25). Release the wires from the posts. 15.16 Lift the output board out of the chassis. 16. Output Board Replacement 16.1 Place the output board (16) into the chassis (2). Align the board so the two brackets on the board face the back panel of the chassis. 16.2 Secure the output board to the bottom of the chassis by tightening two screws (11) with a phillips-head screwdriver. 16.3 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to tighten two screws (11) into the output board brackets. The screws are driven from the outside of the back panel. 16.4 Connect the output board black wires to the binding posts (items 24 or 25) by tightening four nuts with a wrench. Refer to Figure 19 for the proper wiring. 16.5 Connect the I/O board (6) ribbon cable to the output board J2 connector. 16.6 Connect the fan (23) connector to the output board J3 connector. 16.7 Return the heatsink (18) to it's location. Use a phillips-head screwdriver to tighten four screws (29) to the two brackets (22) that fasten the heatsink to the chassis back panel. 16.8 Secure the heatsink to the bottom of the chassis by tightening four screws (3) with a phillips-head screwdriver. The screws are driven from the bottom of the chassis. 16.9 Secure the power supply (7) large capacitors to the inside of the chassis by tightening one screw (20) into the nylon clamp that wraps around one of the capacitors. Note: Refer to wiring diagrams Figures 19 and 20 for the following procedures. 16.10 Connect the cables from the amplifier (15) and power supply board to the output board WL1, WL2, WL100, WL200 and WL201 terminals. 16.11 Connect the amplifier board ribbon cables to the I/O Board J100 and J200 connectors. 16.12 Connect the display board (5) wiring harness to the I/O board J3 connector. 16.13 Solder the red and white wires from the 2-pin harness connector to the I/O board E10 and E11 terminals. They are located near the amplifier board transistor shield (19).

26

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
16.14 Connect the cables from the line filter (10) power or sequence switch board (9) and fuse holder (32) to the power supply WL1-WL8 terminals. 16.15 Connect all the cables connected to the transformer. 16.16 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2.
39

Attach Bridge to Heatsink

30

Power Supply Board

Heatsink Bridge

Heatsink, Amplifier

18

Note: Refer to Figures 6, 8 and 9 for the following procedures. 17. Power Supply Board Removal 17.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 17.2 Remove the transformer (4) using procedure 11.

Figure 9. Heatsink Bridge 17.3 Disconnect the amplifier board (15) ribbon cable from the power supply (7) J2 connector. 17.4 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect the wiring from power supply terminals WL1-WL8. 17.5 Make a note of the wiring configuration and disconnect all of the wires connected to terminals E5-E17 of the power supply board. 17.6 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove one screw from the nylon clamp (21) that secures the power supply large capacitors to the chassis. 17.7 Remove two screws (30) from the heatsink bridge with a phillips-head screwdriver. Refer to Figure 9. 17.8 Disconnect the regulator board (8) from the power supply using procedure 5. Note: The regulator board is not used in the 1600VI amplifier. 17.9 Remove four screws (30), one from each corner of the power supply board with a phillips-head screwdriver. 17.10 Lift the power supply board from the chassis.

Chassis 2

Front

Attaches Transformer 14

13

Qty 4

21 Nylon Clamp

Attaches Power Supply Board to Heatsink
30 Qty 4

Attaches Nylon Clamp

Attaches Heatsink to Chassis

3 Qty 4

Attaches Fan Shield to 3 Chassis Qty 2
18

Heatsink

Attaches Shields 12 to Fan Connector 51 Bracket
AIR FLOW 35 Insulation

52 Shield Bracket 38 Qty 2

29 Qty 4

Attaches Bracket to Heatsink

Heatsink Bracket
22 Qty 2

Back

Figure 8. Side View - Bottom Mounted Components 27

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
18. Power Supply Board Replacement 18.1 Attach the power supply board (7) to the heatsink (18) by tightening four screws (30) into each corner of the board. Use a phillips-head screwdriver. Refer to Figure 7. 18.2 Seat the regulator board into the power supply board, see Procedure 6. 18.3 Secure the power supply heatsink bridge to the heatsink by tightening two screws (30) with a phillips-head screwdriver. 18.4 Secure the power supply large capacitors to the chassis by tightening one screw into the nylon clamp (21). See Figure 8. 18.5 Connect all wiring to the power supply WL1-WL8 terminals. 18.6 Connect all wires attached to the power supply terminals E5-E17. 18.7 Connect the amplifier board ribbon cable to the power supply J2 connector. 18.8 Replace the transformer (4) using procedure 12. 18.9 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. Note: Refer to Figures 6 and 7 for the following procedures. 19. Fan Removal 19.1 Remove the cover (1) using procedure 1. 19.2 Use procedure 15, Steps 15.2-15.12 to move the heatsink (18), with the amplifier, power supply and regulator boards attached, to allow access to the fan (23). 19.3 Release the fan and shield (26) from the chassis back panel by removing two screws (3) with a phillips-head screwdriver. 28 The screws are located over the fan exhaust slot. 19.4 Release the lower shield from the bottom of the chassis by removing two screws (3) with a phillips-head screwdriver. 19.5 Disconnect the fan cable (J1) from the output board (16) J3 connector. 19.6 Lift out the fan and shield. To disassemble the fan from the shields, (upper (27) and lower (26)) use a phillips-head screwdriver and 5/16" wrench to remove four screws (28) and locknuts (12). 20. Fan Replacement 20.1 Place the fan (23) label-side down onto the lower shield (26). The fan is seated flush on one side of the lower shield and a 1/2" space on the other side. Align the fan so that the red and black wires are on the side of the shield with the 1/2" space. 20.2 Place the upper shield (27) on the back of the fan. Use a phillips-head screwdriver and 5/16" wrench to tighten four screws (28) and locknuts (12). 20.3 Secure the fan and shield to the chassis back panel by tightening two screws (3) with a phillips-head screwdriver. The screws are located over the fan exhaust slot. 20.4 Secure the lower shield to the bottom of the chassis by tightening two screws (3) with a phillips-head screwdriver. 20.5 Connect the fan cable into the output board (16) J3 connector (Pin 1 is red, Pin 2 is black). 20.6 Use procedure 16, Steps 16.4-16.15 to install the heatsink (18) and cabling. 20.7 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2.

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
Note: Refer to Figure 6 for the following procedures. 21. I/O Board Removal 21.1 Use Procedure 15, Steps 15.1-15.12 to remove the chassis cover (1), disconnect cabling, and to move the heatsink (18), which will allow access to the I/O board (6). 21.2 Disconnect the I/O board ribbon cable from the output board (16) J2 connector. 21.3 To release the I/O board from the chassis back panel, use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove four screws (11) from the board standoffs. 21.4 If necessary, unsolder the cables from the I/O board E1-E9 terminals. 21.5 Lift the I/O board from the chassis. 22. I/O Board Replacement 22.1 Place the I/O board (6) into the chassis (2) with the component side of the board facing the back panel. 22.2 Solder the cables from the display (5) and power supply board (7) to the I/O board E1-E9 terminals if they were unsoldered in Procedure 21.4. Refer to the wiring diagrams Figures 19 and 20 for proper connection. 22.3 Connect the I/O board ribbon cable to the output board (16) J2 connector. 22.4 Attach the I/O board to the chassis back panel by tightening four screws (11) with a phillips-head screwdriver. The screws are driven from the outside of the back panel. 22.5 Use Procedure 16, Steps 16.4-16.15 to install the heatsink (18) and cables. 22.6 Replace the cover (1) using procedure 2. Figure 10. Input Module Screw Location 29 Note: Refer to Figures 4, 10 and 11 for the following procedures. 23. Input Module Removal 23.1 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove two screws (3) from the input module (17) connector panel. 23.2 Pull the input module out of the chassis (2). 23.3 Disconnect the I/O board (6) ribbon cable from the input module J1 connector. 23.4 Once the input module is out of the amplifier chassis the equalization cards can be accessed. 24. Input Module Replacement 24.1 Slide the input module (17) into its slot far enough so you can connect the I/O board (6) ribbon cable into the input module J1 connector. 24.2 Slide the input module into the chassis slot until the input module J2 connector is completely seated into the I/O board two-pin harness connector. The input module should be flush with the chassis back panel. 24.3 Secure the input module to the amplifier chassis by tightening two screws (3) with a phillips-head screwdriver.

DISASSEMBLY/ASSEMBLY PROCEDURES
Note: The Bose® ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module is used in place of the standard Input Module to allow control and monitoring of the amplifier by use of a control network. It uses the same types of audio input connectors as the standard Input Module, as well as EQ outputs and sequence control. It will accommodate one Bose EQ card for each channel. Refer to the ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module service manual part number 199746 for more information. Note: Refer to Figures 4, 10 and 11 for the following procedures. 25. Bose ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module Removal 25.1 Use a phillips-head screwdriver to remove two screws (3) from the Bose ACM-1 module (17) connector panel. 25.2 Pull the ACM-1 module out of the chassis (2). 25.3 Disconnect the I/O board (6) ribbon cable from the ACM-1 module J1 connector. 25.4 Disconnect the ACM-1 ribbon cable from J2 on the amplifier I/O board. 25.5 Once the ACM-1 module is out of the amplifier chassis the equalization cards can be accessed. 26. Bose ACM-1 Amplifier Control Module Replacement 26.1 Slide the ACM-1 module (17) into its slot far enough so you can connect the amplifier I/O board (6) ribbon cable into the ACM-1 module J1 connector. Pin 1 is to the right as you face the rear of the amplifier. This corresponds to the red stripe on the ribbon cable. 26.2 Connect the ACM-1 ribbon cable to J2 located on the amplifier I/O board. This jack is located on the top right side of 30 the opening in the rear of the amplifier for the ACM-1 module. Pin 1 is to the right. This corresponds to the red stripe on the ribbon cable. 26.2 Slide the ACM-1 module into the chassis slot until the input module J2 connector is completely seated into the I/O board two-pin harness connector. The ACM-1 module should be flush with the chassis back panel. 26.3 Secur