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Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

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    Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

    I think you need to verify the voltages etc on the charger IC pins.

    Is it getting power in? Check Pin 1 for input voltage.
    Check that the ISET resistor (R712) from Pin 2 to ground is OK.
    Check the R710 on Pin 4 to ground is OK.
    What do you get on Pin 8\R709?
    "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
    -David VanHorn

    Comment


      Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

      Ok so on the in pin I have 4.68v and on the out there's only .67v

      I thought maybe c706 might be pulling it down since it's connected to output pin, removed that and still .67v

      Also that .67v goes to one end of D300 while the others have 4.67v and 4.3v. Is it a diode?

      Is u701 bad? I don't measure a dead short from in to output pins

      R712 has 80a marking which is 665 ohms and it measures 550 ohms
      R710 - 30B - 2k ohms measures 631 ohms
      R709 - no markings measures 0 ohms

      Comment


        Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

        Earlier you stated that you measured 4.48V at the battery. ISTM that the battery should only ever see 4.20V from the IC, if I'm reading the datasheet correctly. I don't understand why you are measuring only 0.67V now, unless you have disconnected the battery for this measurement.

        R712 (665 ohms) would suggest that Iout = 540 / R712 = 812 mA. That's the maximum charging current.

        Can you measure the voltage on R712 when the battery is being charged? This will tell us the actual charging current.

        Can you measure the voltage on the thermistor terminal when the battery is being charged? Can you also measure the resistance of the thermistor immediately afterwards, after disconnecting the battery?

        I don't know what D300 does. It appears to be a diode, though.

        Comment


          Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

          I had the battery connected for the voltage measurements, I'm guessing earlier when I had 4.48v was before the fault occurred, or when the battery was full.

          On R712 I measure .19v

          Thermistor terminal is .20v when being charged

          Thermistor resistance at battery terminals with it disconnected is 9.83k ohms
          Thermistor resistance at pin on circuit board with battery disconnected is 19.30k ohms

          And 0v at battery terminals after testing unit with battery for a while, drained and never was able to charge back up
          Last edited by caphair; 09-08-2015, 05:33 AM.

          Comment


            Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

            The TS sensor bias current appears to be 20uA. The datasheet specifies 50uA. That seems like a problem to me.

            (0.2 volts) / (9830 ohms) = 20.3 uA

            The charging current appears to be 103mA.

            Iout = V2 x 540 / (1.5 x R712) = 0.19 x 540 / (1.5 x 665) = 0.103 A = 103 mA

            R710 (2K) appears to be the PRE-TERM resistor. AFAICT it programs the IC for 81mA termination current and 162mA precharge current.

            R709 appears to be connected to the /CHG pin of the IC. A voltage of 0V indicates that the IC is charging while a high voltage indicates no charging or charge complete.

            You should measure the voltage on R709 to determine what the IC is doing.

            Comment


              Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

              Voltage on R709 is 0v both sides

              I noticed the data sheet says that if TS is low to disable ic, I measure .29v on that thermal pin. Would that be considered low? If so does that mean the battery internal thermal circuit is bad?
              Last edited by caphair; 09-08-2015, 02:04 PM.

              Comment


                Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                I could be wrong, but this is my understanding of how the charger works.

                When the battery voltage is very low, the charger starts with a precharge current. This is set by the resistor on the PRE-TERM pin. In your case this current is 162mA.

                When the voltage rises to a sufficient level, the charger then switches to fast-charge mode. The maximum current is then set by the resistor on the ISET pin. In your case this current is 812mA. During this time the charger monitors the temperature and may reduce the charging current in order to keep the temperature from rising above a predetermined maximum.

                When the battery finally charges to a target voltage of 4.2V, the charger goes into constant voltage (float) mode. The current then gradually reduces as the battery's charge is topped up. When the current eventually falls to the pre-term setting, the charger switches off. In your case this current is 81mA.

                The charger senses the temperature by injecting a 50uA bias current into the thermistor and then monitoring the voltage on the TS pin. The datasheet specifies a 10k NTC with ß = 3370 and it suggests the following thermistors:

                (SEMITEC 103AT-2)
                https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...bb9f97abfb.pdf (Mitsubishi TH05-3H103F)

                The following table lists the TS voltages corresponding to various thermistor resistances and temperatures.

                1.5V -> very cold, RT = 30K, T = -2 degC
                1.0V -> cold, RT = 20K, T = 7 degC
                0.5V -> normal, RT = 10K, T = 25 degC
                0.2V -> hot, RT = 4K, T = 51 degC
                0.1V -> very hot, RT = 2K, T = 74 degC

                The IC will not charge if the temperature is too hot or too cold.

                ISTM that the /CHG pin is indicating that the IC is charging.

                The TS pin is reporting that the temperature is a little high. The TS voltage at 9830 ohms should have been around 0.5V but you measured only 0.2V. I think this section of the IC is damaged.

                AIUI, the precharge current is 103mA when it should be 162mA. Therefore I think the corresponding section of the IC is also damaged.

                The IC previously output 4.48V. AFAICS, this voltage should never exceed 4.20V, so I think there is damage in this section of the IC also.

                Comment


                  Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                  Thank you for that detailed explanation! Very much appreciated.

                  So should I try ordering a replacement chip?

                  Also I was thinking, didn't the data sheet say to disable TS to connect a 10k resistor to the pin? Would that be an adequate test to try to bypass that section of the ic and see if it'll charge? Or just go ahead and try replacing?
                  Last edited by caphair; 09-08-2015, 07:54 PM.

                  Comment


                    Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                    AIUI charging is completely disabled if the TS pin is grounded. Therefore that won't help you to troubleshoot the circuit.

                    As for replacing the IC, I would wait for a second opinion.

                    The other thing I don't understand is how the battery came to be flat. I would have thought that the speaker would have shut down when the battery voltage dropped below 3V or so.

                    Comment


                      Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                      Just noticed this, does it look like a burnt mark to you on D300?
                      Attached Files
                      Last edited by caphair; 09-08-2015, 09:28 PM.

                      Comment


                        Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                        Originally posted by caphair View Post
                        Also I was thinking, didn't the data sheet say to disable TS to connect a 10k resistor to the pin? Would that be an adequate test to try to bypass that section of the ic and see if it'll charge? Or just go ahead and try replacing?
                        Originally posted by fzabkar View Post
                        AIUI charging is completely disabled if the TS pin is grounded. Therefore that won't help you to troubleshoot the circuit.

                        As for replacing the IC, I would wait for a second opinion.
                        The datasheet is confusing, but floating the TS pin should allow the charger to run by itself if everything is OK, if it doesn't, then something is probably wrong with it.

                        Originally posted by caphair View Post
                        And 0v at battery terminals after testing unit with battery for a while, drained and never was able to charge back up
                        Sounds like it. Lithium batteries have inbuilt protection circuitry to disconnect them if they are over-discharged as this causes internal damage and using them afterwards is a fire risk.

                        Originally posted by fzabkar View Post
                        The other thing I don't understand is how the battery came to be flat. I would have thought that the speaker would have shut down when the battery voltage dropped below 3V or so.
                        If the charger IC or some other part is bad, the battery could have just kept discharging through a shorted\leaky part, regardless if the speakers were turned off.
                        Originally posted by caphair View Post
                        Just noticed this, does it look like a burnt mark to you on D300?
                        It does indeed.

                        If it was me, I'd remove the charge IC, check the resistors associated with it again and make sure they're OK, then assuming they are OK, install a new charger IC and new D300. Hopefully they are the only bad parts.
                        I guess you'll need a new battery too, of course.

                        Once you put them in, check the voltages again on first test, and run the battery through an ammeter so you see what happens with the charge\discharge currents and make sure they all make sense, hopefully replacing those two parts will fix it.

                        Are you able to determine what D300 actually connects to in the device?
                        "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                        -David VanHorn

                        Comment


                          Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                          Same output of charger ic .67v is measured on third pin of D300 while the other pins have 4.67v and 4.3v

                          Comment


                            Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                            So I'm guessing it's a ww1 diode since the burn mark makes it hard to identify I found another similar one used in the over all circuit.

                            Found this https://cdn.badcaps-static.com/pdfs/...49ac0fb0cb.pdf

                            So going by that I measure
                            4.3v on tab 3 (cathode)
                            4.67v on tab 1 (anode)
                            .67v tab 2 (not connected)

                            So that's interesting. Not sure why it'd be blown, couldn't trace it to any circuit. Will try again later

                            Comment


                              Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                              Actually I got those pins wrong, according to this the w1 would have pin outs of the BAT54C

                              Maybe it's used as a reverse voltage protection diode for the charge chip
                              Attached Files

                              Comment


                                Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                                A BAT54C (WW1) dual diode would fit the bill. That said, ISTM that your diode may be OK. AFAICT, D300 could be OR-ing the battery and regulator outputs to the Bluetooth module. This would allow the device to function in the absence of a battery. A voltage of 0.37V would then be a normal voltage drop (4.67 - 4.3 = 0.37V) for a Schottky rectifier at low currents.


                                Code:
                                      BAT54C
                                
                                       3
                                
                                 BAT+ o-->|---+---|<--o +4.67 from regulator
                                    1   |   2
                                       |
                                       V
                                
                                     to Bluetooth
                                      module ???

                                Comment


                                  Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                                  So you think it's fine even though looks like there's a burn mark on top?

                                  Comment


                                    Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                                    I don't know, but I'd change it anyway. It should be cheap enough.

                                    Comment


                                      Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                                      Ok so bc it's easiest to remove, I removed D300 and plugged charger in, without powering speaker on I took voltage measurements.

                                      The input pin of battery charge ic had 4.67v but now no output at 0v
                                      Also at the contact point of where D300 pin 1 would be there was 4.67v and nothing measured on the other two (as suspected with it removed)

                                      Made me wonder if D300 was shorted and causing output of ic charge to be the low .67v?

                                      Seems like it's needed before charge ic outputs a voltage to the battery
                                      Last edited by caphair; 09-10-2015, 04:40 PM.

                                      Comment


                                        Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                                        Also, is the battery considered not rechargeable since it gives a 0v reading?

                                        If I wanted to charge the battery with my bench psu how would I go about it?

                                        Comment


                                          Re: Harman/Kardon Onyx Bluetooth Speaker - No Power

                                          If the battery now measures 0v at its terminals then it's dead. The protection circuitry has likely disconnected the cell(s) for some reason, maybe over-discharge.

                                          I don't think it's fixable, if it is, I don't know how, in either case, the protection circuitry will have disconnected it for a reason - lithium cells are dangerous if over-discharged or over-charged and should not be used afterwards due to explosion\fire risk.
                                          "Tantalum for the brave, Solid Aluminium for the wise, Wet Electrolytic for the adventurous"
                                          -David VanHorn

                                          Comment

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