Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

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  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    No, not pointless or worthless at all, you saved it from the landfill (unless you paid more for the switch than buying a new heat gun... then it would indeed qualify)!

    However... definitely qualifies for ghetto fix in any circumstance!

    "vollgas" and "standgas" are cute for reading as straight English, but probably quite typical for German...?

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  • Per Hansson
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    vollgas
    standgas
    LOL!

    Leave a comment:


  • REpairAT
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    The tape was there since almost forever, after I accidently stepped on it once. The more recent Sunday-evening fix was the external power switch, after the original one went up in smoke haha

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  • sam_sam_sam
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by REpairAT
    I'm unsure if this is actually the most pointless fix I've ever made, but it sets the bar quite high, even for my standards. At least I had it for around five more years.
    It is amazing what a little duck tape will fix and it was not even meant for that purpose WOW

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  • REpairAT
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    I'm unsure if this is actually the most pointless fix I've ever made, but it sets the bar quite high, even for my standards. At least I had it for around five more years.
    Attached Files

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  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by eccerr0r
    But wait, I thought boring was good?
    Well, I meant as a brand name.

    Otherwise, you can see how one of these has popped from its bottom. I'm sure it must have made at least a "muffled" pop inside the case. Definitely NOT boring!

    Originally posted by eccerr0r
    Shouldn't it be extended to individual components on power supplies, if capacitors made noises, flashes, and smell bad, then they would not be boring and hence bad?
    What's if it's a Rubycon cap with custom RGB LEDs? That would make it not boring (according to "gamer kids" today) and still good?

    Leave a comment:


  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by momaka
    That's because they are Too Boring.
    But wait, I thought boring was good?
    Originally posted by PeteS in CA
    Power Supplies should be boring: No loud noises, no bright flashes, and no bad smells.
    Shouldn't it be extended to individual components on power supplies, if capacitors made noises, flashes, and smell bad, then they would not be boring and hence bad?

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by jayjr1105
    Never heard of TBor brand before.
    That's because they are Too Boring.

    Though, one of yours looks like it almost launched the way it shot out the bottom away from the bung. I guess that one wasn't too boring. It certainly must have made a small pop doing this.

    Originally posted by goodpsusearch
    ToBe OR not to be caps
    Well, I think we figured which option those caps chose when they failed.

    Originally posted by eccerr0r
    Heh I guess that would automatically be called a worthless/useless repair if one doesn't know what the device does and don't expect to ever use or even test the device
    LOLOLOL. So true.

    I guess he can try to sell it online and recoup back the cost of the caps... and maybe enough for a beer too?
    Last edited by momaka; 03-26-2022, 09:40 PM.

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  • jayjr1105
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    You guys will laugh at this one. Got this old iPitomy phone system from the bin at work. It's basically an intel Atom x86 system with a pico DC-DC power supply. I replaced the motherboard caps that were leaking and some additional with Aliexpress Polys and it works fine.

    I troubleshot the power supply for a good month off and on, couldn't figure out why it wouldn't stay running and would go into protection mode. Turns out I was feeding it 19v from a laptop power brick and it needs 12v
    Attached Files

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  • goodpsusearch
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    ToBe OR not to be caps

    Leave a comment:


  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Heh I guess that would automatically be called a worthless/useless repair if one doesn't know what the device does and don't expect to ever use or even test the device

    Leave a comment:


  • jayjr1105
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Sonos bridge. I'm not even a Sonos user so I'm not exactly sure what it does but I think it's an access point for Sonos devices. Has ethernet in the back. Pulled from the trash from work with no signs of life. Can you spot why? 3 new caps and she's as good as new. Never heard of TBor brand before.
    Attached Files

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by momaka
    LOL! But also really cool to see such a tiny speaker used in place of a full-range speaker.
    Yeah, I think the sound would still be "tiny" no matter how many notch filters you have or how big they are. The speaker itself is rated from 150 Hz and up, with a self-resonant frequency around 170 Hz. So it's really more of a mid-range / tweeter driver... and 2" diameter is right for that anyways. Actually, I'm quite surprised that such a small driver can go so "low" in the frequency response.
    I get a little bass from it, but I think there's a dip in the response just above the port tuning frequency. I think there's still a little peak around 1kHz with the current component values (47uF cap and 130µH inductor - it ended up working the best without the resistor), and I hear a second hump that I can remove by dropping the 250Hz and 500Hz sliders in a software EQ.

    I first thought about doing that around 11 or 12 years ago when Parts Express had a really impressive-looking unbranded 2" driver that they were dumping cheap ($2, if I remember right). I ended up only getting one of those drivers and using it for testing (building something like the old Radio Shack speaker with the built-in amp), and I noticed the foam surround starting to degrade a few months ago. Recently, I saw some speakers from Tang Band that have a 1" driver and a passive radiator in a tiny enclosure, and now I'm thinking about a passive radiator design. I also saw the Tectonic BMR drivers (and I think there was another brand that made a similar driver) that are supposed to have really good off-axis response...

    Now I'm thinking of the physics professor I had in college who said that a 15" subwoofer was small.

    Originally posted by momaka
    Your notch filter really inspires me to try and do the same to a pair of headphones I found recently for free (they came in a small PC PSU parts lot.) For the most part, I can correct a good deal of their frequency response with an EQ in WinAmp. But TBH, I never really liked how software EQs sounded in Windows (especially when pushed really hard to correct a lot.) So I'm curious to see if a hardware notch filter / band-gap filter could do them better justice or not.
    I never liked the way software EQs sounded either. Boosting a frequency range is worse because it can start clipping.

    Originally posted by momaka
    However, the #1 thing that I absolutely hate about those headphones is how tight they are on my head, and I don't have a big head. They are over-the-ear design, so after about 1 hour, my ears felt completely numb.
    My current headphones felt tight for a while, but either I got used to it or they loosened up. They're also the over-ear type (Samson SR850).

    Originally posted by momaka
    Hey, I'm still using my Sandisk Cruizer "Mini" 512 MB stick here too. Those old flash drivers are actually quite reliable. In my case, I use mine as a temporary backup of Word files and other important documents - at least until I get files synced across other computers too. I've had that flash drive since high school. I remember my mother bringing it back from work one day and asking me if I needed a flash drive - I did! Back then, I had signed up for a computer graphics (early days before it eventually got renamed to "graphic design") and didn't really have many choices to store my files for later viewing/work at home. Back then (mid 2000's), floppies were out of the questions (especially for Photoshop files), but we often still burned CDs as a way of saving and moving around files. When the first flash drives came out, it was a revelation of how quick and easy it was to move files. So I've been using my 512 MB Sandisk since back then and never really stopped using it. I think I've re-written it with data more than several times over now... and yet also still have a few files from back then that are still readable.
    I got this one when I was in middle school. I haven't used it in a few years, but I used it pretty heavily in school (all the way through college). It's also one of the fastest USB 2.0 flash drives I've seen. I saw more Zip drives than CD burners back then, but those were annoying because no local stores sold anything other than 100MB disks. There were some places that had Zip 750 drives, which could only write to 250MB and 750MB disks.

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  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by lti
    I made my speakers more pointless with a notch filter to get rid of the big hump in the midrange response (I have to use a third-party website because the Peerless datasheets are broken). That 2kHz peak was annoying and caused that "tinny" sound. I haven't trimmed the leads yet because I don't know if I have the correct resistor value yet.

    I don't think these drivers are really worth the money once you add in the price of the filter components. There are even other Peerless 2" drivers with flatter frequency response, like the TC6FC00-04 (although the off-axis response looks worse). At least the magnet structure they use has a weak external magnetic field, so they can be used around CRTs.
    LOL! But also really cool to see such a tiny speaker used in place of a full-range speaker.
    Yeah, I think the sound would still be "tiny" no matter how many notch filters you have or how big they are. The speaker itself is rated from 150 Hz and up, with a self-resonant frequency around 170 Hz. So it's really more of a mid-range / tweeter driver... and 2" diameter is right for that anyways. Actually, I'm quite surprised that such a small driver can go so "low" in the frequency response.

    Your notch filter really inspires me to try and do the same to a pair of headphones I found recently for free (they came in a small PC PSU parts lot.) For the most part, I can correct a good deal of their frequency response with an EQ in WinAmp. But TBH, I never really liked how software EQs sounded in Windows (especially when pushed really hard to correct a lot.) So I'm curious to see if a hardware notch filter / band-gap filter could do them better justice or not. They have really really strong bass, which I'm OK with. But the mid-range is even stronger - in fact, so strong that it took me to a while to figure out what exactly needed correcting, since they sounded like listening through tin cans under water - literally! I'm not exaggerating a single bit. After severely attenuating the low-mids and mid-mids, then boosting the low-highs, mid-highs, and high-highs... they sounded... acceptable. It's the strong bass that I like about them. However, the #1 thing that I absolutely hate about those headphones is how tight they are on my head, and I don't have a big head. They are over-the-ear design, so after about 1 hour, my ears felt completely numb. I remember playing around with some woodworking clamps in my uncles workshop when I was a kid - particularly, how I thought it was funny to tighten them around my head (and maybe that explains my loony behaviors at times ). These headphones simply reminded me of that with how tight they were. Ugh!

    ---------

    While on the discussion of speakers/audio... here are two pretty worthless speaker repairs I did (one last summer, and one last spring):

    Boston Acoustics HD8
    https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=103073

    Philips F9217L-50R
    https://www.badcaps.net/forum/showthread.php?t=103598

    These involved replacing rotten foam surrounds on the woofer drivers with home-made / DIY surrounds from paper towel and latex/household paint. Pretty ugly ... but it works, for what they're worth.

    Originally posted by lti
    Also, you can see that I still have a 512MB flash drive and my really fast Transcend drive is at the bottom of the pile.
    Hey, I'm still using my Sandisk Cruizer "Mini" 512 MB stick here too. Those old flash drivers are actually quite reliable. In my case, I use mine as a temporary backup of Word files and other important documents - at least until I get files synced across other computers too. I've had that flash drive since high school. I remember my mother bringing it back from work one day and asking me if I needed a flash drive - I did! Back then, I had signed up for a computer graphics (early days before it eventually got renamed to "graphic design") and didn't really have many choices to store my files for later viewing/work at home. Back then (mid 2000's), floppies were out of the questions (especially for Photoshop files), but we often still burned CDs as a way of saving and moving around files. When the first flash drives came out, it was a revelation of how quick and easy it was to move files. So I've been using my 512 MB Sandisk since back then and never really stopped using it. I think I've re-written it with data more than several times over now... and yet also still have a few files from back then that are still readable.
    Last edited by momaka; 02-17-2022, 01:01 AM.

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    I made my speakers more pointless with a notch filter to get rid of the big hump in the midrange response (I have to use a third-party website because the Peerless datasheets are broken). That 2kHz peak was annoying and caused that "tinny" sound. I haven't trimmed the leads yet because I don't know if I have the correct resistor value yet.

    I don't think these drivers are really worth the money once you add in the price of the filter components. There are even other Peerless 2" drivers with flatter frequency response, like the TC6FC00-04 (although the off-axis response looks worse). At least the magnet structure they use has a weak external magnetic field, so they can be used around CRTs.

    Also, you can see that I still have a 512MB flash drive and my really fast Transcend drive is at the bottom of the pile.
    Attached Files

    Leave a comment:


  • lti
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by momaka
    Good point!
    Heck, making your own enclosures might give better results than the original plastic ones. Actually, weren't you the one that did that before? I remember a picture on BCN from quite a few years back with some home-made enclosures. I think it was yours, but don't remember 100%. Looked pretty cool, though.
    That was me.

    Originally posted by momaka
    I have a pair of slightly more "premium" stereo computer speakers from the late 90's, and they aren't too bad at all. They use 3.5" (or is it rounded to 4"??) "woofer" drivers going full-range, and a smaller set of 1" drivers for the tweeters.
    The original drivers in these speakers were about that size (92mm outer frame diameter). I was thinking about something that would beat those really expensive Bose computer speakers. There are some Tang Band speaker modules that might do it, but I don't feel like paying that much (close to $70 for a pair).

    Originally posted by momaka
    A lot of the cheaper 2.1 systems have a dual-chamber woofer built with one chamber sealed and the other one ported. The "woofer" driver (typically 3.5-4" cone size) is positioned on the wall between these. Given the small cabinet sizes of these woofers, they have the typical double-humped response, with one peak in the 40-55 Hz range, and the other in the 100-120 Hz range. Their bass response also drops off very sharply below 40-50 Hz, depending on design.
    So yeah, they do often have a boomy midbass, or at least very exaggerated low-end on voice content.
    The really cheap ones have a simple ported enclosure with what looks like a toilet paper tube as a port. One example that I have personally listened to is the Cyber Acoustics CA-3602. On those, turning up the bass control just makes speech impossible to understand, and the bass response drops off at about the same frequency range as the old Dell / Harman Kardon 2.0 speakers like the HK-206.

    Originally posted by momaka
    You should.
    Provided you can find thin enameled wire easily.
    I suppose if you don't mind sacrificing a small DC motor, you can probably get some from there... or scrapped CRT TVs possibly (yoke and focus/pin coils.)
    I didn't spend much time looking for wire, but I don't think I have anything in my scrap pile with thin enough wire.

    Originally posted by momaka
    LOLz.
    Actually, the most that will happen from doing this is you might dampen some cabinet resonance/vibration, especially if the enclosures are rattly and cheap.
    These are cheap, but resonance is less of a problem with the new drivers. Putting damping material in modern $10 speakers would be even more pointless, although the set I have sounds better with the speakers in free air than with the speakers inside the enclosure.

    Leave a comment:


  • momaka
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by lti
    I kind of did, but they can be reused for other projects.
    Good point!
    Heck, making your own enclosures might give better results than the original plastic ones. Actually, weren't you the one that did that before? I remember a picture on BCN from quite a few years back with some home-made enclosures. I think it was yours, but don't remember 100%. Looked pretty cool, though.

    Originally posted by lti
    I'm curious to see if I can make small speakers that don't completely suck.
    Probably.

    I have a pair of slightly more "premium" stereo computer speakers from the late 90's, and they aren't too bad at all. They use 3.5" (or is it rounded to 4"??) "woofer" drivers going full-range, and a smaller set of 1" drivers for the tweeters. Branded "Saturn", model: SP-632A (and look similar to SP-622/SP-610/SP-5100/SP-500 series if anyone cares to look those up.) Based on a KIA6283k single-ended amp IC. They sound very decent, especially for close proximity listening, like they were intended for. Obviously not going to shake any walls with bass, but go down to 50-60 Hz range with relative ease and flatness in a small room. Some of the late Sony CRT TVs used very similar drivers, and they pumped out pretty good sound. Magnetically shielded too, so my CRTs approve!

    Originally posted by lti
    Some companies have tried, but they just boost the "midbass" range into distortion (which most 2.1 computer speakers and all mini-stereo systems also do).
    Yeah, that is true.
    A lot of the cheaper 2.1 systems have a dual-chamber woofer built with one chamber sealed and the other one ported. The "woofer" driver (typically 3.5-4" cone size) is positioned on the wall between these. Given the small cabinet sizes of these woofers, they have the typical double-humped response, with one peak in the 40-55 Hz range, and the other in the 100-120 Hz range. Their bass response also drops off very sharply below 40-50 Hz, depending on design.
    So yeah, they do often have a boomy midbass, or at least very exaggerated low-end on voice content. Even then, though, these are still a lot more controlled than on cheap old ported speakers from the 90's.

    The Realistic Nova-18's mentioned above are actually a prime example of that: they easily go +20dB (or at least sound like it) in the 70-80 Hz range, but drop off quickly below that. "One-note wonders", as some people call them. Of course, that's what happens when you couple a heavy, thick, paper cone with a 1" voice coil and a very weak motor (small magnet + large magnet gap): motor can't control the cone, and the cone does whatever it wants pretty much. Couple that with cheap shallow cabinets (check ), and it's an audio disaster... or a success, if you're trying to annoy your neighbors. Nothing like a thumpy bass going through multiple walls. Almost like taking a hammer and hitting on the walls.

    Originally posted by lti
    Where I live, the only way to get computer speakers for $20 is to buy new, and everything in that price range is the kind of stuff that has fake reviews on online stores.
    I guess that's something I didn't consider. I live in a fairly populous suburban area surrounded by other similarly-sized suburban areas... so probably that's why. There's also always a lot of people moving in and out of this area, too (read: fairly good amount of yard sales and curb alerts when these people move.)

    Originally posted by lti
    From what I remember, changing the input caps affected which channel had weaker bass, but the actual cap value didn't matter. It also doesn't affect headphones, which is strange. The headphone jack is connected to the main amp output with ridiculous 390 ohm series resistors.
    Well, the headphones wouldn't be affected, because they have a large impedance (typically 32 Ohms for most cans), in addition to those silly 390-Ohm series resistors. So even if one of the output coupling caps has gone down to 100 uF capacitance, you still won't notice it with headphones, because that sets the -3 dB low-pass cut-off point at about 4 Hz with those series resistors. But without those resistors and with an 8-Ohm or 4-Ohm load, the -3dB goes up to ~42 Hz or ~85 Hz, respectively for 470 uF output coupling caps (or ~20 Hz and ~40 Hz for 1000 uF caps, respectively.)

    So if the output caps are bad (low capacitance and/or high ESR), that can really affect the -3dB cutoff frequency.

    You can use this tool to see how the capacitance affects the -3dB low frequency cutoff for amps with DC blocking / AC coupling caps on the output:
    http://sim.okawa-denshi.jp/en/CRlowkeisan.htm

    Originally posted by lti
    Maybe I need to get some more 100uF caps to see what happens if I swap the caps around the TEA2025B.
    That too.

    Originally posted by lti
    I thought about it.
    You should.
    Provided you can find thin enameled wire easily.
    I suppose if you don't mind sacrificing a small DC motor, you can probably get some from there... or scrapped CRT TVs possibly (yoke and focus/pin coils.)

    Originally posted by eccerr0r
    Amplifier in those speakers a single ended (with dc blocking capacitor), bridge, or bipolar driver? Highly doubting bipolar but bridge is possible, else cheaper single ended...
    If the speakers are stereo and there is only one TEA2025 amp IC, it's a pretty sure bet it's going to be single-ended application (with DC blocking output caps.)

    Originally posted by eccerr0r
    Suspecting the bipolar and bridge configurations have better bass response that won't get eaten by the blocking capacitor?
    Yes... though if the output DC blocking / AC coupling caps are large enough, you will still get very good bass response.
    As shown with the RC low-pass filter calculator tool above, 8-Ohm load with 1000 uF output cap sets the -3dB at about 20 Hz... which is pretty acceptable. Most of the time, the drivers and the enclosure will be the limitation with such small speaker setup, rather than the output caps... especially on tiny speaker drivers that really can't go down below 50-60 Hz anyways. Might as well block those lower frequencies from going into the driver and wasting power unnecessarily... which could matter in a positive way if the power supply is undersized, as is typically the case with very cheap desktop speakers.

    Originally posted by lti
    To make this even more pointless, I have some sound damping foam that I could stick on the inside.
    LOLz.
    Actually, the most that will happen from doing this is you might dampen some cabinet resonance/vibration, especially if the enclosures are rattly and cheap. If it's a ported design, though, generally damping will make you loose a few dB (at least with larger speakers... not sure if there would be a difference with small desktop speakers like this.)
    Last edited by momaka; 10-14-2021, 12:47 PM.

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  • lti
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    It's single-ended.

    Other configurations might still have a DC blocking cap on the input.

    To make this even more pointless, I have some sound damping foam that I could stick on the inside.

    Leave a comment:


  • eccerr0r
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Amplifier in those speakers a single ended (with dc blocking capacitor), bridge, or bipolar driver? Highly doubting bipolar but bridge is possible, else cheaper single ended...

    Suspecting the bipolar and bridge configurations have better bass response that won't get eaten by the blocking capacitor?

    Leave a comment:


  • lti
    replied
    Re: Post your worthless and/or pointless repairs

    Originally posted by momaka
    So wait, you bought those drivers specifically to fix these speakers? At almost $10 a piece, I can get a 2.1 system in good working condition around here. But I guess that was the point of your repair/exercise, wasn't it. Fits the thread pretty well.
    I kind of did, but they can be reused for other projects. I'm curious to see if I can make small speakers that don't completely suck. Some companies have tried, but they just boost the "midbass" range into distortion (which most 2.1 computer speakers and all mini-stereo systems also do). Where I live, the only way to get computer speakers for $20 is to buy new, and everything in that price range is the kind of stuff that has fake reviews on online stores.

    Originally posted by momaka
    As for the weak bass... I imagine that is likely caused by a bad cap somewhere - either electrically leaky or high ESR / low capacitance. If you swap the input signals going to each pin on the amplifier IC and the weak bass follows, the issue is before the amp in the signal circuit somewhere. And if the issue doesn't follow, then either bad output coupling or feedback cap in the channel with the weak bass. And if it's neither of those, perhaps the amp is bad. In that case, crank it up to the max and let it smoke itself out?? Bonus points if you use an adapter with voltage rated very close to the absolute maximum rated.
    From what I remember, changing the input caps affected which channel had weaker bass, but the actual cap value didn't matter. It also doesn't affect headphones, which is strange. The headphone jack is connected to the main amp output with ridiculous 390 ohm series resistors. Maybe I need to get some more 100uF caps to see what happens if I swap the caps around the TEA2025B.

    Originally posted by momaka
    So perhaps if you want to waste even more time with these speakers, you can try to rewind the old smoked drivers, if you still have them.
    I thought about it.

    Leave a comment:

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