NAD C370 protection circuit repair (amp fails, goes into protection mode)

A C370 with a defective protection circuit generally fails in a specific way.  The amp will work fine when cold, but after being on for several minutes, the protection circuit will activate.  Power cycling will not help, unless the amp is allowed to cool fully before the next attempt.

Well if you found me by the google because precisely this happened to you, you’re in luck. I just repaired mine for the wonderful sum of 63 cents.

To perform this fix you need to be somewhat comfortable with a soldering iron, and be willing to take your amp apart. If you aren’t very good with an iron, you’ll want to read through some how-to pages elsewhere until you’re comfortable with replacing through-hole capacitors on a printed circuit board.

nad c370 apart
My C370 ripped apart on my workbench
So it turns out the design issue with these amps is that NAD decided to put a hot-running diode right beside (touching!) some electrolytic capacitors in the protection circuit. The heat from the diode ages the capacitors prematurely, which causes their values to drift.  The new values tend to cause the circuit to activate unnecessarily.

c370 protection circuit
The protection circuit
Luckily, the fix is simple.  First of all, locate the protection circuit pictured above. As you can see from the picture, mine had some obvious heat problems. Nothing looks broken per se, but it looks nicely toasted, especially on the right side and top. To get it working again, I’d recommend replacing the three topmost capacitors. Their values are 4.7uF, 47uF and 10uF all rated at 50V. I wouldn’t get anything larger than 50V as I’m not sure if it would fit.

**edit: According to Stu in the comments below, some amps have 63V caps, so I guess slightly larger caps might fit. Either way I wouldn’t recommend replacing your capacitors with new ones of a lower value than stock**

For those who are interested, here is the schematic for the protection circuit:

c370 protection module schematic
NAD C370 Protection Circuit Schematic
With those three caps replaced, the amp should work fine. But in a couple years, those caps will die too. I found a great solution on a forum: move the diode to the other side of the board.  Warning: make sure you keep the proper orientation of the diode when putting it on the other side of the board.

protection mode cct done
Diode on the back of the board
Now apply power, hope there aren’t any sparks, and enjoy the music!

47 Comments

  • John Ross says:

    Hi Ian – just wondered if you had any experience of the NAD C370 – I have one that just buzzes from the relay once it powers on – I wondered if it could be related to the fault you detail on the protection board – the diode is very discoloured and badly heated.
    Any info would be appreciated.

    Thanks
    John

  • Chris Ramsell says:

    Ian,
    Thanks for the wonderful information. My NAD 370 has exactly the problem that you described. Now I will fix it myself, rather than bringing it to the shop.
    BTW; you have one small typo above, that is worth fixing:
    Warning: make sure you keep the proper orientation of the capacitor when putting it on the other side of the board.
    Should be: proper orientation of the “Diode”.

    Thanks again,
    Chris Ramsell
    Chris@CherryBlossomHomes.com

  • H J Hill says:

    I suspect you’ve identified the problem with my C370. For some months the relays were very slow to connect the speakers. Then, finally, switching on caused a mechanical buzzing from inside the C370; and a dead amplifier.

    I take it the hot diode is Zener D721. The circuit diagram gives “24V 5W”; but the NAD C370 electrical parts list gives “24V 0.5W” (i.e. 500 mW). From the look of it in your photo, 5W has to be the correct value. (I can’t look and check; it’s still at the repairer’s awaiting my collection – they declared it too old for getting parts!)

    • H J Hill says:

      (Update) Instead of unnecessarily moving the (hot) zener diode: when the dried capacitors are removed their replacements could be soldered on the rear of the circuit board. Another possibility is to solder the replacements on the front but with longer lead lengths (sleeved for insulation) to stand them away from the zener.

      Beware the printed circuit; it’s not that robust.

      • ian says:

        Yeah, the only reason I decided to swap the zener was to keep it away from the resistors and other components on that little board. The heat damage on the front of the board was pretty amazing.

        Luckily my PCB stuck together well. What happened to yours? Lifted traces?

        I’m also curious if this fixed your amp. Your symptoms are a little different from what I experienced, as mine worked fine when cold, and only cut out after it warmed up. No buzzes or anything, just a yellow (IIRC) warning light.

        If so, I should add a note about other possible failure modes to the blog post.

    • Lem says:

      I noticed the two values for the diode so I checked in with NAD. They told me that it was originally a 0.5W but they changed the spec to 5W to improve reliability. Hence the discrepancy.

      • Tom says:

        I reckon it’s just a misprint in the service manual, it should definitely be 5w not 0.5.

        The part number is correctly listed as “02-00240-50” for “D721”. The ’50’ at the end denotes 5 watts, note that D1 and D2 really are 24v 0.5w zeners and the part no is the same but end “05”.

  • Tom says:

    I Have a 370, goes into protection on switch-on, but not if the MONO BRIDGE switch at the back is in the on position. I suspect a sticky relay, but I need a circuit diagram to see what is going on when the MONO switch is flipped.

    • John says:

      Hello! i have the same problem as you, it works perfectly in bridge mode but after i switch to stereo it suddenly goes into protect mode!! I wonder if you did find out what the problem was?

  • Sam says:

    I have a nad L53 dvd receiver
    that does exactly what your c370
    did. Do you think that the protection circuit is identical in these amps & receivers ?

    • ian says:

      Hey Sam. I’m not sure, as I’ve never been inside an L53. I found the parts to be visibly damaged when I opened mine, so hopefully a visual inspection will point you in the right direction if you’re having a similar problem.

      I haven’t been able to find schematics that properly detail the operation of this circuit, so in my case it was just replacing the obviously burnt out parts, rather than legitimate troubleshooting.

  • Adam says:

    Hi – I just did the repair explained (replacing 3 caps and also the diode) – but my C370 still goes into protection mode 🙁 Any suggestions about what to do next ?

    • ian says:

      Hey Adam,

      If the behaviour was initially the same as I described (with it working for some time before entering protection mode), I’d be suspicious that you still have bad components on the board, or they weren’t installed properly.

      If not, perhaps the circuit is operating as intended and protecting the amp from a real fault (e.g. blown transistor or faulty relay)?

      Sorry I can’t be of much assistance, as I’ve only had to be inside mine that once.

      • Adam says:

        Hi Ian – thanks for the answer – I’ll try replace relays or buy a new amp 🙂

        /Adam

        • dan says:

          Hi Adam, Im in the same situation. Changed the 3 capacitors, but the protection clicks in after a couple of seconds. Did you find a solution? Or buy a new amp?!
          thanks
          Dan

          • Joe says:

            Mines the same after replacement capacitor kit.

          • Roy says:

            Same here!
            When i bridge the amp it’s ok.
            I allso Replaced all of the big capacitors on the mainboard.
            Should i replace the diode on the protection board?

        • Joe says:

          I’ve replaced the 3 diodes and still in protection mode. Was operating fine until recently when load pop from speakers was shortly followed by protection mode. It powers up normally, then after max 30s clicks into protection mode.
          Given up for now and replaced with lower powered Yamaha AS501 (which has optic in). Sounds great! Miss the NADs lower volume prowess and punch though….

          • Joe says:

            Ok, quick follow up… I did some troubleshooting and in plugged all connections to each channel either side of amp with big heat sinks, plugged them all back in with a little wiggle and it’s now powered up fine for about 5min without protection circuit kicking in! The NAD lives on…

  • Robert says:

    Hello Ian
    My question I want to replace the 3 capacitors in the circuit protection in Nad ​​C370 I do not know just what should be a zener diode D721 Does it have to be 24V, 5W, or 24V 0.5W.
    Very please with explanation.
    Kind Regards Robert.

    • ian says:

      Sorry for the late reply here — you got caught up in the spam filter.

      According to earlier comments here, the diode value was increased from 0.5 watts to 5 watts to improve reliability. If you are replacing it, definitely go with 5 watts.

  • Bill says:

    I have a nad 370 works perfectly except for click or pop on left channel upon power on (after relay engages ) could that be related to protection circuit. Present on A and B speaker terminals

  • Starcrouz says:

    I repaired my NAD320BEE with the same problem. it’s in french but I explained that here : http://stephane-rouilly.blogspot.fr/2014/12/reparation-dun-ampli-audio-nad320bee.html if you need to repair yours.

  • TIM HOLLAND says:

    Hello Everyone: I have a NAD 370 that seems to lose power to the right channel if I turn the balance completely to the right channel. As I turn it back to the left, it plays just about as loud as the left side. If I turn the volume up while the balance is all the way right, I hear the right channel a bit. In the beginning, the right channel was dropping out completely. Now, it plays on the right channel just about as loud as the left as I begin to move the balance from all the way right. The is no noise as I move the balance knob. I have changed the four relays and the four big capacitors that are known to fail in these amps. Any ideas where the problem could be? .

    • Tom says:

      Hello, did you get this sorted? I know it’s a good while ago now but if you still have the problem I may be able to help you track it down.

  • Will Biddle says:

    Hi, I also have a C370, which goes into protection mode after 5 – 10 mins , but not if the MONO BRIDGE switch at the back is in the on position. An earlier post suggests a sticky relay, (he needed to see a circuit diagram to see what is going on when the MONO switch is flipped). Any ideas? Cheers, Will

  • Paul says:

    Hi, It looks like I have just the opposite problem as most folks above. When I turn on the power I have very weak sound in both or one channel for about 7-10 min until it warms up and then it works perfect. Any ideas? Thanks.

    • Evcricket says:

      Hi Paul, that’s pretty much the problem that I had.

      My big capacitors in the power circuit were drying out, so their values were getting a bit weird. It’s been suggested that as they dry they get out of balance, and the protection circuit sees that as a problem and cuts in. As they charge the reach balance and work fine again. It’s a sign the end is coming. See my comment below for the full fix I did.

      Evcricket

      • Paul says:

        Hi Evcricket,

        I did changed exactly the same capacitors that you did about 4 months ago (all 6 of them). Then after reading post above I did the fix on protection circuit (man those solders are tiny). Still no change.
        For the 4 big ones I used Panasonic capacitors that are probably not the best choice for audio but were the only ones with 4 pins in right place to fit the board and exact specifications.
        What I do now is crank the volume up to about 50% or more with speakers off for about 10 min. Then lower the volume, turn speakers on and it works fine. I almost got used to routine :).
        I’m glad you got it working. Thanks for reply.

        Paul

  • Evcricket says:

    Hi Ian,

    Thanks a lot for this post. 9 years on and it pretty much fixed my amp!

    I was having a start up problem where orange protection light came on, then eventually went off and everything worked. Then we moved house and the first time I powered it up the orange light came on, the amp made some noises and the smoke came out.

    I opened it up and the three biggest capacitors in the power circuit (10,000uF, 2200uF and 1000uF) were showing various stages of damage so I replaced them. [As an aside, for the 1000 the shop I went to only had 63V when I needed 100V. Installed them anyway, and they went fffzzzzzzztttttTTTTTTTTT!!!! Lesson learned]

    So I replaced all of those with some nice ELNA and Nichicon caps. Very straightforward job. I’m in Australia so had to order some from OS, and there are loads on Ebay. I was very happy with the NAD engineers when I realised they’d included both sets of mounting holes for the very big caps.

    Put all this back together and turned it on. Green -> orange for a few minutes -> green -> orange for about 30s -> then settled on green. Then I read this post and decided to fix the protection circuit. So I moved the diode to the back and replaced the top 3 caps; 47uF, 10uF and 4.7uF. This is a bit trickier than the big ones, the 4.7uF in particular I found really hard to separate the solder points, but got there.

    Put it back together, turned it on and it’s been all green ever since. Haven’t had a good listen yet but it sounds pretty good, maybe a bit raw. I’ll run it in for a few weeks before I get too sad.

    Thanks a lot, you saved my amp. I’ll let you know how it’s going in 15 years.

    Evcricket

    • ian says:

      I’m glad this post is still helping people after so long.

      Sadly my amp is down again. Though this time it’s self-protecting on cold starts rather than once warm. I guess it’s time to crack it open again.

      • dan says:

        Hi Ian, Thanks for this post. My C370 started cutting out around ten years ago so I sent it to be repaired. Recently the same issue has raised its ugly head so I thought Id do some googling and found this post.

        My amp was cutting out after approx 10-30 mins, then over time this decreased and it now it cuts out on a cold start. I have just got round to replacing the 3 capacitors, but unfortunately it still clicks out after around 2 seconds and the red light comes on.

        Any suggestions?

        From the invoice of the previous repair it says 4 small / 2 large caps replaced and replaced Psci (?) comps (handwriting not that clear). I can see from the flux deposits that the 3 capacitors that you highlighted were replaced and the larger 25V 470uF one below the other three too.

        Any ideas on what to try next would be great. Maybe I should change the 25V 470uF too? Otherwise Im going to have to send it off to be repaired. 🙁

        Thanks

  • bimbo says:

    What’s left of famous NAD reliability? You build 1 good amp (in the 80s) & then sell ripoffs for 40 years that’s the power of frickin marketing ain’t it?

    • ian says:

      They certainly made a design error with this amp, but I think that might be an unnecessarily negative view of their products as a whole.

      Even with this amp, other than this capacitor-destroying issue, I’m quite happy with the performance of my C370.

      I just redid the above procedure and aligned the amp yesterday, so hopefully it’s back up for another 9 years.

      • Tom says:

        Hi ian, thanks for this post. I’ve just bought one of these amps and the protection circuit has already had the caps replaced but many of the other caps in the amp look like they’ve been subject to excess heat and they’re all just 85deg rated. I’m going to replace all the electrolytics in it.

        I just wondered if you have had to replace any capacitors other than the protection circuit ones? The ones on the amplifier boards look particularly susceptible to heat (namely c311, 322, 411 and 422). On the power supply board c748 and 749 also look fairly toasted by the nearby regulators.

        cheers,
        Tom

        • ian says:

          Hi Tom,

          So far no, I have not had to replace any other capacitors. Though I have heard others say that they have.

          I had a pretty good look at the amplifier boards last time I had mine open, and mine don’t seem especially cooked.

  • Michel de Heer says:

    I just repaired my c370 by replacing the three caps. And it works again so thanks for that! However, now I have a very faint and fast clicking sound in the right channel. Especially noticable during pauses. And it’s really annoying when listening through headphones. Does anyone know where this comes from? It’s driving me mad

    Thnx
    Mich

  • Jeremy says:

    Hi,
    I repair it, thanks for this tuto, just 4 years ago and my ampli fallow worcking wonderfully. So thank you for that…

  • gianpiero says:

    hello,
    I have a protection circuit problem with right channel of my NAD C326BEE, maybe the solution is similar? thanks

  • Leo says:

    Hi
    I have the same problem as many posts in that my C370 works in bridged but protects in stereo. All major caps and the protection circuit have been changed, being careful to use high ripple where needed especially for the two 2200uf 50v. I can’t believe that a connector glitch is the cause as they have been in and out so often. Anyone know a definite cause?

  • Audiofreak says:

    After having worked on a few NAD’s already, I have to say they are one of the worst garbage designs I’ve ever encountered. Even if they sound very good for their price, I suggest to stay well clear of them.
    Had a C370 with broken protection circuit, in the end I had to replace 40 electrolytics, resolder tons of solder joints or joints that got so hot they lifted from the board. The caps are like the worst made in China crapola you can get and often placed way too close to regulator’s heatsinks making them fail very quickly. On my ESR meter they were reading either an O/C or insane ESR values between 100-150 Ohms and about 1/4th of their rated capacity.
    The post 2000 models are all designed to fail within 5 to 10 years.

    • ian says:

      Can’t say I disagree.

      Mine’s been out of service for half a year now due to an issue I’ve been unable to track down.

      I’ve tried a couple times, but at this point I’m not sure it’s worth the effort.

      I like the thing alright when it works though.. :/

  • Aris K says:

    I have the same amp but slightly differently fault. When I turn on the amp I get a pop (thump) on the speakers. Same when I turn it off, other than that it works fine.

    Any advise ??

    regards
    Aris K

    • ian says:

      The output shouldn’t be connected to the speakers during initial power on, and as the amp powers off.

      Perhaps the relays that are supposed to isolate the output until the protection circuit flips them on are stuck?

      I’m no expert in amp repair, but I’ve heard of that being a somewhat common fault.

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