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Electronics Repair (sci.electronics.repair) Discussion of repairing electronic equipment. Topics include requests for assistance, where to obtain servicing information and parts, techniques for diagnosis and repair, and annecdotes about success, failures and problems. |
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This may be a fairly standard fix, but I didn't find this
problem in the s.c.r faq or via Google. I would be grateful for any advice. I have a Denon DRA-345R stereo receiver/amplifier, hooked up to a pair of Bose 31 speakers. Both are about ten years old and have seen hard wear - little abuse (one of the speakers has been dropped once) but they have moved house 10-12 times, lived in very dusty environments, been left on 24/7 for weeks. The problem I have now is that, whenever I push one of the input select buttons (CD, tuner, video), I hear a loud pop from whichever speaker is connected to the right-channel output. The amp has two sets of speaker outs and you hear the pop on both the "A" right and "B" right outs. The loudness of the pop seems to be independent of the setting of volume or balance controls, but becomes quieter if you push several input selects in quick succession, and louder if you wait several seconds or minutes. (Something charging, then shorting?) There is a pop at power-off which is louder than the pop from pushing an input select button. Presumably there would be one at power-on, but the relay hasn't kicked in yet. If you turn off a set of speakers by pushing the speaker-select button on the front panel, you don't hear a pop (or any music, unfortunately). The afflicted channel plays music well enough (from my CD player), but if the amp has been on for an hour or so, the resulting pop when it's turned off is loud enough to make me fear damage to the speaker. I haven't done any troubleshooting other than switching speakers around to verify that it's the choice of out and not the speaker that matters. I can solder neatly (have built a number of circuits from kits) but have no real electronics knowledge or troubleshooting experience, so I would be grateful for some direction as to where I should look for causes, and (in particular) anything I should avoid doing or touching so as not to cause further damage. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer, Chris Jeris |
#2
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This is a DC problem. Maybe an offset from the amp section, but it sounds
more like a bad input select IC (if any) or maybe a bad muting transistor. I especially like the muting transistors. See if maybe it has a couple 2sc2878 transistors and measure the voltage at the collectors. There should be none, but sometimes they get a bit leaky. A reverse bias to the base, used to "un-mute" leaks through to the collector, and there's a 'pop' heard. Mark Z. "Chris Jeris" wrote in message m... This may be a fairly standard fix, but I didn't find this problem in the s.c.r faq or via Google. I would be grateful for any advice. I have a Denon DRA-345R stereo receiver/amplifier, hooked up to a pair of Bose 31 speakers. Both are about ten years old and have seen hard wear - little abuse (one of the speakers has been dropped once) but they have moved house 10-12 times, lived in very dusty environments, been left on 24/7 for weeks. The problem I have now is that, whenever I push one of the input select buttons (CD, tuner, video), I hear a loud pop from whichever speaker is connected to the right-channel output. The amp has two sets of speaker outs and you hear the pop on both the "A" right and "B" right outs. The loudness of the pop seems to be independent of the setting of volume or balance controls, but becomes quieter if you push several input selects in quick succession, and louder if you wait several seconds or minutes. (Something charging, then shorting?) There is a pop at power-off which is louder than the pop from pushing an input select button. Presumably there would be one at power-on, but the relay hasn't kicked in yet. If you turn off a set of speakers by pushing the speaker-select button on the front panel, you don't hear a pop (or any music, unfortunately). The afflicted channel plays music well enough (from my CD player), but if the amp has been on for an hour or so, the resulting pop when it's turned off is loud enough to make me fear damage to the speaker. I haven't done any troubleshooting other than switching speakers around to verify that it's the choice of out and not the speaker that matters. I can solder neatly (have built a number of circuits from kits) but have no real electronics knowledge or troubleshooting experience, so I would be grateful for some direction as to where I should look for causes, and (in particular) anything I should avoid doing or touching so as not to cause further damage. Thanks in advance for any help you can offer, Chris Jeris |
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