Hey there,
New member here with an old speaker set I found in my new apartment. It is a 2.1 system from maybe year 2006.
What I have done: checked the fuse (fine), looked over every piece under a magnifying glass to spot any visible damage (none), tested the subwoofer element on another amp (works great), tested the sub's amp pins with a voltmeter for any signal (got none). So it must be the amp.
The 2 satellites connect to the subwoofer and as I've found, they are run from a separate amp, because I get perfect sound from the little speakers.
A few threads I ran across in google suggested that a resistor in position R24 (47 ohm, 1/2W) is the main culprit for this kind of problem, so I replaced it without testing it first, just to be sure - I later found that the resistor was fine...
Then I got a multimeter and tested most of the resistors in the area surrounded by the heatsink. I did get one odd reading where the value kept changing, but I think it's because I didn't remove the resistor from the circuit - too lazy and I don't have a solder removal pump at hand...
So my question is: What should I look at as the most probable suspect in this case? I have no experience in "tracing" a broken component, so a step-by-step walkthrough would make my day
Images included: 1) top down view with the rear facing up
2) bottom view with the rear facing up
3) close up of the area surrounded by heatsink
4) close up of the area behind the heatsink
Thanks a ton and if you need any clarifications, please ask. This is a good project to keep me "entertained" for a while, so any suggestions etc. are welcome!
New member here with an old speaker set I found in my new apartment. It is a 2.1 system from maybe year 2006.
What I have done: checked the fuse (fine), looked over every piece under a magnifying glass to spot any visible damage (none), tested the subwoofer element on another amp (works great), tested the sub's amp pins with a voltmeter for any signal (got none). So it must be the amp.
The 2 satellites connect to the subwoofer and as I've found, they are run from a separate amp, because I get perfect sound from the little speakers.
A few threads I ran across in google suggested that a resistor in position R24 (47 ohm, 1/2W) is the main culprit for this kind of problem, so I replaced it without testing it first, just to be sure - I later found that the resistor was fine...

Then I got a multimeter and tested most of the resistors in the area surrounded by the heatsink. I did get one odd reading where the value kept changing, but I think it's because I didn't remove the resistor from the circuit - too lazy and I don't have a solder removal pump at hand...
So my question is: What should I look at as the most probable suspect in this case? I have no experience in "tracing" a broken component, so a step-by-step walkthrough would make my day

Images included: 1) top down view with the rear facing up
2) bottom view with the rear facing up
3) close up of the area surrounded by heatsink
4) close up of the area behind the heatsink
Thanks a ton and if you need any clarifications, please ask. This is a good project to keep me "entertained" for a while, so any suggestions etc. are welcome!
Comment