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Old February 6th 04, 03:23 AM
Frank Gilliland
 
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In ,
(BILL) wrote:

THIS IS MY STORY- THERE ARE MANY MORE, JUST SEARCH THE INTERNET
GROUPS!!!!!


The following is a copy of a product return report I sent to copper.

To who it may concern,
This amp was delivered to me on Jan. 9 2004, cod by ups. I hooked it
up properly to my Cobra 142gtl base and let it set at room temp to
allow it to warm up some as it came off the truck very cold. I used it
on AM for approx 15 min with no problems. I switched both amp and
radio to sb and spoke to a friend for a short time,no problems. I
keyed the mic again and before speaking the amp made a pop noise and I
noticed smoke comming out of the top vent. I shut unit off and put it
right back in the box that it arrived in. My radio was bought new by
me, and has never had any mods or so called golden screw drivers in
it. I believe the radio comes from the factory in good working order
and does not require any "fixing to operate properly, thus longer life
radio parts from undue stress. This radio does 4-5 watts on am and a
max of 12(with screem in mic) on sb. I use a stock cobra mic and a
solarcon antenna. These facts I have stated I swear to. I believe the
proper thing to do is exchange this unit for a new working one as I
believe the unit sent was defective. This would be the proper thing to
do rather than have the customer wait on repairs, parts or ect. If I
must wait then so be it. Thanks you, William D-n-v-n

Mr. D-n-v-n,
We received your amp back from our repair shop and they said that you
overdrove the
unit and blew it up. The repair bill will be $102.00. Let me know what
you want to do.
Thanks
Suzanne

YOU BE THE JUDGE OF ALL THIS_



What sympathy? Call 1-800-BOO-HOOO. Need legal advice? Don't buy illegal amps.
How about a technical opinion? Most "linear" amps are rated for peak power (PEP)
for both input and output. That means if it's rated for 4 watts input, don't
feed it any more than 1 watt RMS on AM or 4 watts PEP on SSB. If it's rated for
100 watts PEP output, that means you shouldn't run it any higher than 25 watts
out on AM. If that's the case then you probably did overdrive it. You could also
have some grounding issues, or a mismatch between the radio and the amp. And
here's some more advice: Learn what you are doing so you don't get burned in the
future.






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