- This topic has 5 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 1 year, 10 months ago by sprockett.
- AuthorPosts
- 12 July 2022 at 09:13 #36125
I am looking at an Beolab 8000 which puzzle me.
There are no audio cable connected, when AC power is turned on it starts with green LED and hum – I would expect red LED and no hum.
There are GND connection from audio connector to PCB2 connector P4-3.
Apprently is picks up noise internally, but where from?
Any idea what that could be?/Pindsen
13 July 2022 at 05:40 #36127No I tried without any audio cable because that to me should be a good starting point where I would expect red LED and total silence.
If I apply a powerlink cable it is more or less the same with green LED and around same hum, but if I apply an RCA cable the hum gets a lot higher.
13 July 2022 at 07:55 #36126Did you connect a Powerlink or RCA cable to one of the connectors?
what do you see and hear when you do that?
14 July 2022 at 08:05 #36128I have discovered that if the outer aluminium part is being touched it increases the hum. My assumption is that the aluminium part is/or should be “grounded” to the amplifier via the six screws?
Another discovery is that when doing a short circuit of the RCA input the noise in the RCA switch selection lowers to nearly nothing.
I have tried to see if the internal cabling is correct, and it seems like. It though wonders me why the audio cable runs directly under the transformer.
15 July 2022 at 08:44 #36129Okay, to finish up my own thread 🙂 my conclusion is now that there did not exist a proper connection between aluminium part and amplifier despite being screwed together. I noticed that the screws are some kind of black CED coated, and by working the screws back and forth several times the hum disappeared and the speaker now works as it should.
25 January 2023 at 11:23 #36130I noticed the same behaviour with BL6000.
Basically, when you are in LINE IN mode, you NEED to have everything terminated properly, even if there is no RCA plugged in.
For my case, by BL6000 needs to be have Line-in RCA plugged in to the source using a cable, before everything is silent. If you don’t want to plug anything in, you need to short the input via a terminating plug.
- AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.