Electronic – What does this rail-splitter-like circuit do

bjtvirtual-ground

I'm repairing an audio amplifier for a car. It has a switching supply that generates +/- 50V rails from the ~12V battery. In the output section of the amplifier, I found this small circuit with obviously damaged components. When I found it, the base and collector of Q2 were bridged with solder in what I assume was an error made by a previous attempt at a repair by someone else.

R1 is scorched badly enough that I can't identify it, though it tests as 23.2 kohms. R2 has color bands indicating it's supposed to be 33.2 ohms, though it actually tests as 3.32 kohms. R3 appears to be labelled as 200 ohms, but the 3rd band could be a faded yellow or gold. R3 tests as open circuit. D1 used to be a 1N4735A zener but it doesn't zeen anymore and instead tests as a 5 Mohm resistor in both directions.

I'd like to replace all the parts in this circuit with known good parts, but I'm having difficultly understanding what this circuit is supposed to do so that I can select appropriate resistor values. It looks like a rail-splitter, but it has no inputs or outputs other than the two rails. The circuit doesn't produce a virtual ground, but there's also no need for one here because the battery negative terminal serves as a ground.

I've removed this circuit from the board entirely and everything seems to work fine without it, though I haven't tested the amplifier at full load.

schematic

simulate this circuit – Schematic created using CircuitLab

What is this circuit supposed to do? What would appropriate values for R1, R2, and R3 be?

Best Answer

It might be intended to generate a constant load on the 50 V rails. Some (early) switched supplies don't regulate properly at low output current. A circuit like this could guarantee enough load to allow proper regulation. It might have been easier to add this circuit than modify the switched supplies to work properly at low output current.

What voltages do you get on the power rails with no audio and running at a decent volume? If you can disconnect the amplifier from the 50 V supplies what output voltages do they then have? Is there a voltage rating printed on the zener diode?