Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi All,
I recently purchased a Beomaster 2400-2. The guy I purchased it of assured me it was working fine, but when I got it home it was a different story.... There seems to be a loud humming noise in the background, this seems to be present on all the inputs as well as the radio. I plugged in a set of headphones (thinking it might be the speaker outputs), but the hum was still there. The other problem is with the radio...FM5 seems to work fine (despite the hum) but all the other FM presets have no sound FM1 to FM4 (when I turn up the volume to the maximum, I can hear them faintly) I am just wondering if anyone has had any experience with these systems?, and could describe what the problem may be. I haven't had much technical experience, but I am adventurous with a screwdriver and soldering iron. If anyone has any schematics or any instructions on how to dismantle it, that would also be great. Given the problems, it is still a cool looking amp. I was gutted when I discovered that it didn't work as I had been after one for quite a while.... Any help appreciated, Cheers, Paul Sydney, Australia |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Paul" wrote in message om... Hi All, I recently purchased a Beomaster 2400-2. The guy I purchased it of assured me it was working fine, but when I got it home it was a different story.... **Hmmm. You could take it back. There seems to be a loud humming noise in the background, this seems to be present on all the inputs as well as the radio. I plugged in a set of headphones (thinking it might be the speaker outputs), but the hum was still there. **I'd suspect power supply problems. In that old thing, you should be considering replacing all the electros. The other problem is with the radio...FM5 seems to work fine (despite the hum) but all the other FM presets have no sound FM1 to FM4 (when I turn up the volume to the maximum, I can hear them faintly) I am just wondering if anyone has had any experience with these systems?, and could describe what the problem may be. **Nope. That's a new on for me. I haven't had much technical experience, but I am adventurous with a screwdriver and soldering iron. **Then I suspect you're headed for disaster. B&Os are notoriously difficult to work on. If anyone has any schematics or any instructions on how to dismantle it, that would also be great. **You'll have to call you local B&O agent and pay the Bucks for a manual. When you quote the model number, make sure you also have the Type Number handy. They usually want to know that as well. Given the problems, it is still a cool looking amp. I was gutted when I discovered that it didn't work as I had been after one for quite a while.... **Yep, B&Os are cool looking. As you will find, however, they are very expensive to service. Any help appreciated, **Buy a manual. Better still, get your money back. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
You'd better take it back, if he said there is nothing wrong with it!
Usually people sell things because there are problems with it. It is very rare that these things come used with no faults. If a piece of equipment is working well, there is no reason to sell it, unless it is from an estate sale or bad dept problem. To service it, you will need more than a soldering iron and a screwdriver! You will need some test equipment, the service manual, and a fair amount of service experience. The hum is most likely from some bad caps in the power supply, and maybe some decoupler caps that have gone high in ESR. You will need an ESR meter to properly test the capacitors. As for the FM problem, fixing the hum may also fix this, or there may be some front end problems. The front end of the receiver is fairly complex to service, and someone going in that area without the knowledge of servicing RF circuits will probably do more damage than good. You would be best off getting an estimate from a B&O service rep, and if you find it too expensive to service, then you will have to swallow your losses if you cannot return the set to the vendor. -- Jerry G. ========================== "Paul" wrote in message om... Hi All, I recently purchased a Beomaster 2400-2. The guy I purchased it of assured me it was working fine, but when I got it home it was a different story.... There seems to be a loud humming noise in the background, this seems to be present on all the inputs as well as the radio. I plugged in a set of headphones (thinking it might be the speaker outputs), but the hum was still there. The other problem is with the radio...FM5 seems to work fine (despite the hum) but all the other FM presets have no sound FM1 to FM4 (when I turn up the volume to the maximum, I can hear them faintly) I am just wondering if anyone has had any experience with these systems?, and could describe what the problem may be. I haven't had much technical experience, but I am adventurous with a screwdriver and soldering iron. If anyone has any schematics or any instructions on how to dismantle it, that would also be great. Given the problems, it is still a cool looking amp. I was gutted when I discovered that it didn't work as I had been after one for quite a while.... Any help appreciated, Cheers, Paul Sydney, Australia |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 8 Aug 2004 07:18:22 -0400, "Jerry G."
wrote: Usually people sell things because there are problems with it. ????? fairly one dimensional generalisation don't you think??? so the entire second hand market is faulty? It is very rare that these things come used with no faults. most B and O second hand equipment is faulty or most second hand equipment is faulty?? If a piece of equipment is working well, there is no reason to sell it, unless it is from an estate sale or bad dept problem. Do youthink the trading post should type the above as a disclaimer?? Doyou think such a sign should be displayed in cash converters?? |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Usually people sell things because there are problems with it.
????? fairly one dimensional generalisation don't you think??? so the entire second hand market is faulty? Have to agree---it's a pretty silly generalisation. I've been Ebaying now for some years with no problems. My experience is that people don't sell faulty things directly; if they believe it's faulty they take it to Cash Convertors so they don't have to cop the flack when you come back complaining. But that's not to say Cash Convertors is all faulty stuff either; just that you need to bear the above in mind. In any case they give a 30 day guarantee. It is very rare that these things come used with no faults. Mostly wrong. There are any number of reasons why people sell things, of which faults is but one. People's requirements change. They just crave something different. If they still like something and it goes faulty, they get it fixed. Methinks this poster has had some very unfortunate buying experiences indeed. most B and O second hand equipment is faulty or most second hand equipment is faulty?? If a piece of equipment is working well, there is no reason to sell it, unless it is from an estate sale or bad dept problem. See above. More life experience or more imagination required here. Do youthink the trading post should type the above as a disclaimer?? Doyou think such a sign should be displayed in cash converters?? The mere fact that the second hand market is burgeoning gives the lie to all this. And long may it live as far as I'm concerned. |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for the info....looks like a job I probably won't be able to do myself...
I wish I could take it back, but I purchased it from a flea market :-( Thanks, Paul |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The Beomaster 2400 can be serviced by a careful hobbyist, but if you're
a neophyte, it's going to be a challenge, because everything fits together "just so". That said, I'd get ahold of a service manual before proceeding. Stare at the schamatics until they begin to make a bit of sense. One area I'd look at would be a low-voltage supply used in switching audio sources: The B&O injects a few volts of DC into the signal lines, causing signal to flow (or not) through IN914 switching diodes. Kind of clever, but that small power supply does fail from time to time, and when it does, hum and/or unresponsive touch controls are the result. I've also heard from other B&O restorers who claim that the original electrolytic capacitors are failure prone and must be changed. There are lot of electrolytics in the thing! I plan on eventually doing just this to my own 2400, but after all the work, I don't think I'd ever be able to break even in resale. A pretty nice-sounding receiver overall; the FM tuner is best with strong, clean signals. Paul wrote Hi All, I recently purchased a Beomaster 2400-2. The guy I purchased it of assured me it was working fine, but when I got it home it was a different story.... There seems to be a loud humming noise in the background, this seems to be present on all the inputs as well as the radio. I plugged in a set of headphones (thinking it might be the speaker outputs), but the hum was still there. The other problem is with the radio...FM5 seems to work fine (despite the hum) but all the other FM presets have no sound FM1 to FM4 (when I turn up the volume to the maximum, I can hear them faintly) I am just wondering if anyone has had any experience with these systems?, and could describe what the problem may be. I haven't had much technical experience, but I am adventurous with a screwdriver and soldering iron. If anyone has any schematics or any instructions on how to dismantle it, that would also be great. Given the problems, it is still a cool looking amp. I was gutted when I discovered that it didn't work as I had been after one for quite a while.... Any help appreciated, Cheers, Paul Sydney, Australia |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FA BANG & OLUFSEN S75 Beovox Speakers | General |