SVS PB13-Ultra
Verstärkerplatine — repariert.
The SVS PB13-Ultra shipped across two very different amplifier generations — the original 750W BASH module and the later Sledge STA-1000D upgrade — and both are known to fail completely dead with zero response. Neither manufacturer publishes a schematic, which is exactly why a bench that has mapped both boards is worth more here than a fresh fuse.
Ist es wirklich die Platine?
Diese Fehlerbilder sehen wir beim SVS PB13-Ultra. Finden Sie Ihr Symptom, bevor Sie einen Cent ausgeben.
- No power at all, AC fuse blows on power-up (original BASH 750W amplifier)PLATINE — WIR BEHEBEN DAS
The original BASH amplifier's inrush-limiting thermistor is a well-documented weak point on this platform — it fails and takes the mains fuse with it, producing a dead unit that blows a fresh fuse again on the next attempt.
- Completely dead — no response, no lights, even though AC power is present (Sledge STA-1000D upgrade amp)PLATINE — WIR BEHEBEN DAS
On the later Sledge STA-1000D board, this pattern traces to one of two distinct causes depending on the batch: a failed soft-start opto-isolator that never lets the power supply start, or a pair of primary-side switching transistors damaged by a mains surge. Both produce the identical symptom, so bench diagnosis is the only way to know which repair path applies.
Warum die Originalplatine ausfällt
The PB13-Ultra is unusual in that SVS shipped it with two completely different amplifier designs over its production run. Earlier units use a 750W BASH module built by Indigo Electronics (later acquired by Sonavox) — the same amplifier platform used, under different badges, in several other brands' subwoofers of that era. Its known weak point is the inrush-limiting thermistor on the power input stage, which fails and blows the mains fuse; owners who simply replace the fuse without replacing the thermistor find it blows again almost immediately.
Later units instead use SVS's own Sledge STA-1000D board, manufactured for SVS by Formosa-Audio, which also went on to power the PC13-Ultra and SB13-Ultra. When this board goes completely dead — AC present, zero response — two independent, unrelated fault paths produce the exact same symptom: a failed opto-isolator in the soft-start circuit that never lets the main switching transistors fire, or those same primary-side switching transistors damaged directly by a mains surge. Neither Indigo/Sonavox nor Formosa-Audio publishes schematics for these boards (Formosa-Audio treats the design as a trade secret), which is the main reason DIY repair attempts stall out — our bench has already reverse-engineered both generations well enough to diagnose which specific fault applies to your unit before any parts are ordered.
Einsendereparatur für dieses Modell
Noch keine standardisierte Platine — aber unsere Werkbank repariert diese auf Bauteilebene, getestet und zurückgesendet.
- 01 Reparaturformular mit Symptomen und Fotos absenden
- 02 Wir bestätigen die Reparierbarkeit und senden unsere Adresse — Sie verschicken nur die Platine
- 03 Werkbank-Diagnose, Festpreis per E-Mail — keine Reparatur, keine Kosten
- 04 Repariert, getestet, zurückgesendet — Rückversand übernehmen wir
Fragen von Besitzern
How do I know which amplifier generation my PB13-Ultra has?
Tell us your serial number or send a photo of the amplifier plate's rear label when you submit the repair form — we'll identify whether it's the original BASH 750W or the later Sledge STA-1000D and diagnose accordingly.
SVS/the original manufacturer says this amp can't be repaired without a schematic. How can you fix it?
Neither Indigo/Sonavox (the original BASH manufacturer) nor Formosa-Audio (who builds the Sledge boards for SVS) releases circuit diagrams. We've independently mapped both platforms' common failure points well enough to diagnose and repair them at the bench without needing the manufacturer's documentation.
Is it worth repairing a PB13-Ultra given its age?
Usually, yes. This is a flagship-tier subwoofer with a driver and cabinet that hold their value well; the amplifier fault is isolated and well understood, so repair is typically far cheaper than replacing the whole unit.