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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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Hi all,
I have a system with a Pioneer VSX-3000 stereo receiver (a fairly old receiver, 60Wpc) controlling decent SPL monitors in one room and Cambridge soundwork speakers in a second room. I've noticed that when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. I'm wondering if any of you have had a similar problem, and in particular whether the problem is the receiver itself, or perhaps related to speaker wires. I'm pretty sure the problem isn't the speakers, but I could be wrong. I've been thinking of upgrading my receiver anyway, in which case I would find out my answer through simple experimentation, but I was curious if this was a common problem. Any thoughts would be appreciated! Best, - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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On 22 Jan 2006 21:40:20 GMT, Mark Glickman wrote:
Hi all, I have a system with a Pioneer VSX-3000 stereo receiver (a fairly old receiver, 60Wpc) controlling decent SPL monitors in one room and Cambridge soundwork speakers in a second room. I've noticed that when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. I'm wondering if any of you have had a similar problem, and in particular whether the problem is the receiver itself, or perhaps related to speaker wires. I'm pretty sure the problem isn't the speakers, but I could be wrong. I've been thinking of upgrading my receiver anyway, in which case I would find out my answer through simple experimentation, but I was curious if this was a common problem. Any thoughts would be appreciated! Best, - Mark Almost certainly it is the volume control which is bad. Try and get some electrical lubricant inside it, or at worst get it replaced. Does it improve temporarily if you wind it quickly back and forth several times? d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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In rec.audio.tech Don Pearce wrote:
: Almost certainly it is the volume control which is bad. Try and get : some electrical lubricant inside it, or at worst get it replaced. : Does it improve temporarily if you wind it quickly back and forth : several times? Thanks for the suggestion, though the volume control consists of two clickable buttons on the unit, one increasing volume and the other decreasing the volume. Usually I control the volume from a remote. In any case, the volume is not a dial/knob control. Sorry this wasn't clearer in my first post... Any other thoughts would be appreciated! - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Mark Glickman" wrote in message ... In rec.audio.tech Don Pearce wrote: : Almost certainly it is the volume control which is bad. Try and get : some electrical lubricant inside it, or at worst get it replaced. : Does it improve temporarily if you wind it quickly back and forth : several times? Thanks for the suggestion, though the volume control consists of two clickable buttons on the unit, one increasing volume and the other decreasing the volume. Usually I control the volume from a remote. In any case, the volume is not a dial/knob control. Sorry this wasn't clearer in my first post... Any other thoughts would be appreciated! Speaker voice-coils stuffed and rubbing on magnets. Needs a bit of ooomph before they move at all. Do they sound crappy when they do work ? geoff |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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In rec.audio.tech Geoff@home wrote:
: Speaker voice-coils stuffed and rubbing on magnets. Needs a bit of ooomph : before they move at all. Do they sound crappy when they do work ? When the speakers are working, they sound fine. Given that I get the same behavior with two different sets of speakers, my inference is that the speakers are probably not the problem. I should point out that *sometimes* the speakers work fine at low volumes, but it's hit or miss. Thanks for the suggestion. - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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Mark Glickman wrote:
In rec.audio.tech Don Pearce wrote: : Almost certainly it is the volume control which is bad. Try and get : some electrical lubricant inside it, or at worst get it replaced. : Does it improve temporarily if you wind it quickly back and forth : several times? Thanks for the suggestion, though the volume control consists of two clickable buttons on the unit, one increasing volume and the other decreasing the volume. Usually I control the volume from a remote. In any case, the volume is not a dial/knob control. Sorry this wasn't clearer in my first post... Service manual time, or time for a peek inside, a motor turning a volume control pot is a sonically good solution, so it might still be a volume control potentiometer issue. - Mark Kind regards Peter Larsen -- ******************************************* * My site is at: http://www.muyiovatki.dk * ******************************************* |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Mark Glickman" wrote in message ... Hi all, I have a system with a Pioneer VSX-3000 stereo receiver (a fairly old receiver, 60Wpc) controlling decent SPL monitors in one room and Cambridge soundwork speakers in a second room. I've noticed that when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. Sounds like a dodgy connection or almost-broken wire somewhere. I'd start at the computer end, move the wires and connections around a bit until you find something that affects the sound... you'll probably break whatever it is in the process but at least you'll know what to replace! |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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Rich Wilson wrote:
"Mark Glickman" wrote in message ... when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. Sounds like a dodgy connection or almost-broken wire somewhere. I'd start at the computer end, move the wires and connections around a bit until you find something that affects the sound... you'll probably break whatever it is in the process but at least you'll know what to replace! Agreed. Sounds like a bad connection somewhere in the path. // Walt |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Mark Glickman" wrote in message ... Hi all, I have a system with a Pioneer VSX-3000 stereo receiver (a fairly old receiver, 60Wpc) controlling decent SPL monitors in one room and Cambridge soundwork speakers in a second room. I've noticed that when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. I'm wondering if any of you have had a similar problem, and in particular whether the problem is the receiver itself, or perhaps related to speaker wires. I'm pretty sure the problem isn't the speakers, but I could be wrong. I've been thinking of upgrading my receiver anyway, in which case I would find out my answer through simple experimentation, but I was curious if this was a common problem. Any thoughts would be appreciated! Best, - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg Mark, I had an old pioneer receiver, too good to toss, not for prime home use, so off to work it went to supply music to several areas of my shop, intermittent audio was the problem and it was usually the speaker selector switch, mine would supply three groups of speakers and it was usually "B" group that went first, high contact resistance was the cause, turn up the volume and the contacts would fuse together and work. A good cleaning and lube would solve the problem for several months. this amp was 20 years old, I ended up bypassing the switch altogether, it's ugly but it still works too well to toss. The other thing to check, is the wire to the remote speaker one continuous piece or are there any splices in the run? it doesn't take much resistance to be intermittent. Hope you find your open circuit, Dave_________ |
#10
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "David Ballinger" wrote in message news:fkXAf.11559$Dh.1823@dukeread04... "Mark Glickman" wrote in message ... Hi all, I have a system with a Pioneer VSX-3000 stereo receiver (a fairly old receiver, 60Wpc) controlling decent SPL monitors in one room and Cambridge soundwork speakers in a second room. I've noticed that when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. I'm wondering if any of you have had a similar problem, and in particular whether the problem is the receiver itself, or perhaps related to speaker wires. I'm pretty sure the problem isn't the speakers, but I could be wrong. I've been thinking of upgrading my receiver anyway, in which case I would find out my answer through simple experimentation, but I was curious if this was a common problem. Any thoughts would be appreciated! Best, - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg Mark, I had an old pioneer receiver, too good to toss, not for prime home use, so off to work it went to supply music to several areas of my shop, intermittent audio was the problem and it was usually the speaker selector switch, mine would supply three groups of speakers and it was usually "B" group that went first, high contact resistance was the cause, turn up the volume and the contacts would fuse together and work. A good cleaning and lube would solve the problem for several months. this amp was 20 years old, I ended up bypassing the switch altogether, it's ugly but it still works too well to toss. The other thing to check, is the wire to the remote speaker one continuous piece or are there any splices in the run? it doesn't take much resistance to be intermittent. Hope you find your open circuit, Dave_________ Speaker A / B switches dirty or speaker relay cutting out. Almost certainly one or the other. You can try pushing, wiggling, otherwise manipulating the speaker switch(es) and see if that affects the problem. I seem to remember the B speaker switch many be a problem on these - if the A/B switching is series, which it may well be. Mark Z. |
#11
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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Thanks to everyone for their helpful (and varied) responses.
Rich Wilson and Walt, I'll check the speaker wire. My gut tells me, however, that it's a bit too coincidental to have the same problems with four different wires (leading to two pairs of speakers). Peter Larsen - not sure what to do if the problem is related to the volume control pontentiometer. I may need to open up the receiver to take a look... David Ballinger and Mark Zacharias, my bet is that you identified the problem. I do notice that the B speakers cut out more drastically than the A speakers. When I open up the receiver, I'll take a look at the A/B switches and the speaker relay. As an aside, the speaker wires are single continuous wires - not several pieces spliced together. Thanks again, everyone. - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg |
#12
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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![]() "Mark Glickman" wrote in message ... Thanks to everyone for their helpful (and varied) responses. Rich Wilson and Walt, I'll check the speaker wire. My gut tells me, however, that it's a bit too coincidental to have the same problems with four different wires (leading to two pairs of speakers). Yes... if the cables are completely separate it's unlikely to be that. I think I may have got the wrong impression about exactly how your system's set up! |
#13
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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In article , Mark Glickman
wrote: Hi all, I have a system with a Pioneer VSX-3000 stereo receiver (a fairly old receiver, 60Wpc) controlling decent SPL monitors in one room and Cambridge soundwork speakers in a second room. I've noticed that when I have the volume low, the sound in one of the speakers in a pair often drops out completely, and sporadically comes back in. This happens in both sets of speakers in each room. When the volume setting is moderate or high, the sound does not cut out. I'm wondering if any of you have had a similar problem, and in particular whether the problem is the receiver itself, or perhaps related to speaker wires. I'm pretty sure the problem isn't the speakers, but I could be wrong. I've been thinking of upgrading my receiver anyway, in which case I would find out my answer through simple experimentation, but I was curious if this was a common problem. Any thoughts would be appreciated! Best, - Mark [snip] I've had a similar problem with an SX-850 now and then, and find that a periodic vigorous flipping of all the switches and rotation of all the knobs while operating at an elevated sound level seems to restore operation to normal, which leads me to conclude (as some others have) that the problem is the result of contact oxidation that is being burnt off during the process. -- skin that tater before replying |
#14
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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In rec.audio.misc Ray Tate wrote:
: [snip] : I've had a similar problem with an SX-850 now and then, and find that a : periodic vigorous flipping of all the switches and rotation of all the : knobs while operating at an elevated sound level seems to restore : operation to normal, which leads me to conclude (as some others have) : that the problem is the result of contact oxidation that is being burnt : off during the process. Thanks for the response - that's an interesting suggestion. I just bought a new receiver (JVC RX-8040B) and the problems I was experiencing have disappeared, thus ruling out the speakers or speaker wire as the problem. I'm planning to open up the old pioneer receiver and check the contacts on the speaker switches. Hoping the restore the receiver to a useable condition! - Mark -- Prof. Mark E. Glickman Center for Health Quality, Outcomes & Economics Research Edith Nourse Rogers Memorial Hospital (152), Bldg 70 200 Springs Road Bedford, MA 01730 tel: (781) 687-2875 fax: (781) 687-3106 http://math.bu.edu/people/mg |
#15
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Posted to rec.audio.misc,rec.audio.tech,rec.audio.opinion
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Mark Glickman said:
I'm planning to open up the old pioneer receiver and check the contacts on the speaker switches. Hoping the restore the receiver to a useable condition! Check the speaker relay(s).....9 out of 10 times this is where your problem lies. Either replace them, or clean the contacts (which isn't always possible, and even when you succeed, sometimes the problem comes back after a while). -- - Never argue with idiots, they drag you down their level and beat you with experience. - |
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