I have gotten many many questions about upgrading amps...
Lets talk a little about theory and practical electronics...
There are two kinds of electronics...theory and practical...Theory is what should be happening based on the drawings of some poor guy whos been pulling his hair out hammering away on a calculator that has the numbers and symbols worn off the buttons. Practical is whats actually happening once you put it together and you test it....The difference between the two is sometimes great and sometimes very small and much of it has to do with the parts selected to get the job done.(board layout can play a role in performance and noise as well and you just have to hope that whoever laid out the board knew what they were doing.) ((As a side note...most boards now days are laid out by computers that are capable of making more mistakes in .25 of a second then we could possibly make in five life times)) All parts have cetain tolerance ratings...and the tolerance rating is a factor in the cost of the part, when we consider a passive part such as a resistor tolerance is measured as a % rating..10% tolerance parts are cheaper than5% tolerance parts and so on.... Voltage and current rating are factors in fet selection....there are also other things to consider when selecting a fet for a application but the cost issue usually revolves around current and voltage handling.....some fets and transistors just have better sound quality than others in a audio application and some are designed for just audio applications...And of course capacitors...Virtually all audiophiles have a preference for a capacitor thats going to be installed in the audio stream of their amp...
I have my preferences too.I like to use certain parts based on reliability...sound quality...possible gains in power output..and in some cases cosmetic appearance improvements as well....
So...possible upgrades can include just about replacing every part in your amp...Alot of it has to do with what your starting out with....
POWER SUPPLIES...If you send me a amp and the power supply is bad..Im gonna do any upgrades to it that I know of right off the bat...I dont want the amp to come back for a power supply failure so I'm gonna be sure its right...I start out with the best FET's available for your application. When I fix a power supply ALL the fets are getting changed if ones bad and Im gonna replace then with the best ones I can put in the amp...I usually upgrade to 1% tolerance flame proof gate resistors.I check all the caps...If I have to replace caps I'll call you and we can talk about possible upgrades or just replacing them with the same type. I typically see bad caps in a power supply about 30% of the time...but for the fets and the resistors and simple stuff like that...I consider that part of a normal repair and I dont charge extra for it...
AMPLIFIER SECTION...In the audio end of a amp its a little different..Its not a good idea to upgrade a channel just because it blew up...your channels wont match anymore..so upgrades for audio cost more..in effect its like fixing both channels.or all 4 in multi channel amps..every change you make to a audio section effects sound quality...so if you change one channel...you gotta change them all...When I repair a output channel I concentrate more on getting the bad channel to match back up with the other channel(s) in the amp. If your interested in making changes we can talk about that up front before I start working on it.After I get to look at it and see what is in the amp as it is.
So if I have your amp on the bench and its got a bad power supply I'm gonna comepletely go through it and Im replacing every part thats not perfect and Im gonna use the best parts available to do it..and it has no effect on the total price of the repair.Its the way I've been doing it for years and I wouldnt know how to do it any other way.
If you have a bad channel Im gonna fix it and get it back to spec with the other channels unless your interested in making changes to it..then once I have the amp and see where Im at to start out I'll call and we can talk about the options