Logitech Z506 with corrosion

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  • Traptor
    Senior Member
    • Nov 2021
    • 111
    • Magyarország

    #1

    Logitech Z506 with corrosion

    Hi Guys,
    I have a Logitech Z506 with some problem.
    The main problem was the front right and subwoofer gave a hard noise.
    After the disassemble I found many corrosion on the mainboard as you can see on the pictures.
    I removed the corrosions and the noise disappeared but the sound too.

    I think some parts is damaged because of the corrosion.
    I searched a lot on the internet but I cant find correct schematic for this pcb, so I dont know what is the correct values of the damaged parts.
    But I found same good pictures of this board.

    If you anybody can help me please don't hesitate.

    So, I need values for R403, R404, R426
    Attached Files
  • alfatv
    Badcaps Veteran
    • Sep 2020
    • 353
    • Canada

    #2
    Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

    Yes, SMT resistors are more likely to fail from corrosion.
    You have few options:
    - Find picture of a good board
    - Find out part number of that IC, then find datasheet and check reference circuit. But this will not work in case of opamps.
    - If the same chip used in another circuit on the same board, check what components are there.
    If you are really determined, you can reverse engineer it and draw a circuit.

    Comment

    • jons
      Senior Member
      • Feb 2014
      • 59
      • Latvia

      #3
      Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

      Clean all that yellowish stuff also because it will corrode anything underneath. It is the same as brown you cleaned, only in second not third phase of transformation.

      Comment

      • Traptor
        Senior Member
        • Nov 2021
        • 111
        • Magyarország

        #4
        Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

        Thank you the suggestion, I got the information.
        R403 = 15 kohm
        R404 = 47 kohm
        R426 = 47 kohm

        Comment

        • Traptor
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2021
          • 111
          • Magyarország

          #5
          Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

          You are right.
          Have you any idea for cleaning method?

          Comment

          • Traptor
            Senior Member
            • Nov 2021
            • 111
            • Magyarország

            #6
            Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

            OK I found a simple method for cleaning: I heated the glue with a hot air station to 100 C and the glue softened and than I could removed that.

            Comment

            • nobbnobb1
              Senior Member
              • Nov 2019
              • 76
              • Canada

              #7
              Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

              Did your repair end up working out? That looks really nasty! I never knew that some heat would help remove the glue...I've always had to chip it away manually.

              I'm also curious how it managed to get that bad in the first place. Do you live somewhere hot? Looks like the corrosion got bad enough that things started shorting out in a significant fashion.

              Comment

              • Traptor
                Senior Member
                • Nov 2021
                • 111
                • Magyarország

                #8
                Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

                Yes, I repaired the Z506.
                The heat helped to remove the glue because the hard glue softened.
                I live in Hungary in middle Europe so I dont think the weather is the reason of corrosion. Btw I saw lot of picture of Z506 with corrosion pcb.
                My opinion is the used glue is not a good quality.

                Comment

                • jons
                  Senior Member
                  • Feb 2014
                  • 59
                  • Latvia

                  #9
                  Re: Logitech Z506 with corrosion

                  Originally posted by nobbnobb1
                  I'm also curious how it managed to get that bad in the first place. Do you live somewhere hot? Looks like the corrosion got bad enough that things started shorting out in a significant fashion.
                  It's mostly glue's chemical composition which reacts with natural moisture in air, nothing to do with heat. And that glue manufacturers used from early 80's, here some 1981 HK amplifier which I had recently but examples are countless.
                  Attached Files

                  Comment

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