- This topic has 4 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 2 years, 1 month ago by Die_Bogener.
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- 18 October 2022 at 04:45 #39960
Hi all! I’m new to this forum so excuse me for any uncustomary ways, feel free to let me know if I’m in the wrong place etc!!
I have inherited a pair of beolab 6000’s, and on one of the speakers the tweeter won’t work.
I’ve swapped the tweeter itself around to make sure it’s not an issue with that, but the issue remains on the one 6000. Can anyone point me in the right direction as to what would be the next course of action for a DIY repair?
I don’t particularly want to spend an arm and a leg to get it repaired if there’s potentially a quick fix.
Thanks in advance!
18 October 2022 at 04:45 #39961Hi all! I’m new to this forum so excuse me for any uncustomary ways, feel free to let me know if I’m in the wrong place etc!!
I have inherited a pair of beolab 6000’s, and on one of the speakers the tweeter won’t work.
I’ve swapped the tweeter itself around to make sure it’s not an issue with that, but the issue remains on the one 6000. Can anyone point me in the right direction as to what would be the next course of action for a DIY repair?
I don’t particularly want to spend an arm and a leg to get it repaired if there’s potentially a quick fix.
Thanks in advance!
18 October 2022 at 06:29 #39962There is no quick fix, unfortunately. Check the treble amp, its level trimmer, and the wiring too.
18 October 2022 at 06:46 #3996319 October 2022 at 12:39 #39964There is no quick fix, unfortunately. Check the treble amp, its level trimmer, and the wiring too.
Confirmed.
But even if it was playing louder (level trimmer wrong…) it would not fail so easy and blow the tweeter… there is more. Tweeter fail because of a DC offset on the signal.
Check for DC direct on the tweeter.
And it would make sense to connect a small 12V bulb parallel for testing. It would show the fail of the amp if glowing.
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