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Untitled Page
ARCHIVED FORUM -- April 2007 to March 2012 READ ONLY FORUM
This is the first Archived Forum which was active between 17th April 2007 and
1st March February 2012
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12-04-2008 9:32 AM
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futurist


- Joined on 04-17-2007
- Posts 171

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Hi all I switched my on my BeoSound 9000 attached to BeoLab 1s tonight to be greeted with a rather alarming and loud 'crack' sound from the left speaker, possibly like a power surge (not really sure what this sounds like). Result: left hand speaker no longer works. Terrific! The red power indicator light is still on, but does not change to green once the music starts like the right hand speaker does. I unplugged and let the system sit for a while, but to no avail. The system is about seven and a half years old. Any suggestions as to what the problem might be or (amateur!) ways to diagnose? Could it be the BeoSound 9000? Do BeoLab 1s have a fuse? Have I blown a speaker unit? Could the powerlink cable be at fault? Will it be hideously expensive to repair? These speakers are beautiful but rather unwieldy - I don't fancy having to take it to the repair centre. Help! Stuart
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bayerische


- Joined on 12-11-2007
- Helsinki, Finland
- Posts 3,593

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I would leave it unplugged from the mains for a few hours. I'm not sure this would help, but worth a try...?
-Andreas
BLab5, BLab5000, BLab8000, BV10, BS9000, BS3, Beo5, Beo4, BLink1000, BLink5000, BLink7000, A2, A8, Form2
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Iconic-AV



- Joined on 04-16-2007
- Birmingham UK
- Posts 902

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i had a customer with a similar problem, i found hed moved his beosound 9000 to a different position, it turned out that on setting it back up he had not pushed in one of the powerlink cables properly. try disconnecting everything then reconnecting all the cables again, it also wont hurt to swap over the powerlink cables at the same time , turn the volume right down first on your beosound 9000 and try it. its a long shot i know, if not i would agree with graham and get them looked at by a service centre. regards jason
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koning



- Joined on 04-16-2007
- Netherlands
- Posts 2,670

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When I blow up my tweeter, the light also doesn't turned green anymore. It's a protection when somethings wrong!
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futurist


- Joined on 04-17-2007
- Posts 171

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Thanks to everyone for your replies so far. Still not working I'm afraid... Guess that means what I suspected it did all along (but was hoping I'd missed something) - a trip to the repairer. Cheers Stuart
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futurist


- Joined on 04-17-2007
- Posts 171

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Well, as you can see from the age of he thread, this happened some time ago. It was fixed, albeit with a AU$500 replacement of the electronics - apparently, to facilitate faster repair B&O recommend simply replacing the main chassis (rather than taking it apart and looking for what could be quite a tedious to find and subtle fault for a repairer) and the faulty one is sent back to Denmark for repair and replacement in someone else's BL1.
Curious approach but so be it - I needed it repaired. However, fast-forward a year and a half and the other BL1 does the same thing! A loud crack and no more sound. (To be honest, it had been doing this on and off for a month or two, but powering off and on again always fixed the problem. Not any more however.) Here I go again...
The BL1 are ~10 years old. I have a pair of Mordaunt Short speakers attached to my original Marantz sound system which must be 15 years old and still going strong.
Am I unlucky, or is this sort of failure an inherent issue with BL1 (or other B&O speakers)? Anyone else had problems?
Stuart
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Pattabhiraman



- Joined on 08-05-2007
- Bombay; India
- Posts 56

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hi stuart,
i very much empathize you on the above as i had to replace the chasis of mine last year. it costed me 30K INR ~ 650US; i was told by the earlier owner that the chasis needed a replacement as possibly there was a surge.
the B&o dealer ordered a unit and replaced the faulty one though the report did not mention the reason for the same. needless to mention it was an ardous task to replace it.
given it recurred again in your other unit can some body here suggest the possible reasons and preventive measures for the same.
regards
pattabhi
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Dave


- Joined on 04-17-2007
- Brisbane, Australia
- Posts 2,328

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I'm very curious, i'm also in AUS, i used to have BL1, no problems... but... did you always leave it on at the power point? and, How often was the system in use?
Pure curiosity, I understand electronics like to be used, and they also do not like to be switched off at the powerpoint.
I can't believe the problems you have had with your BL1, very very sorry to hear about it, NOT GOOD!...
Maybe the early units were not as well resolved as the units produced later in the 7 years they were in production>>>
“Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of intelligent effort.”
Your health and well-being comes first and fore-most.
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futurist


- Joined on 04-17-2007
- Posts 171

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Hi pattabhi and Dave
The speakers are never switched off - always plugged in and on standby. The BS9000 they are attached to doesn't get a lot of use.
The repairer said he doubted it was a surge issue - after the first failure, I was concerned that it may have been caused because the system was plugged into an inexpensive powerboard without surge protection, and told him this. His opinion was that the speakers were able to withstand power fluctuations and that surge protectors didn't always work anyway.
If there had been a surge wouldn't both speakers plugged into the powerboard have suffered the same fate at the same time?
Having said all of this, I haven't had this problem officially diagnosed yet. Could be something else.
I read about your BL1 theft and replacement dilemma Dave. Are you still considering a new pair? (Possibly not after reading this...!)
Cheers
Stuart
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Dave


- Joined on 04-17-2007
- Brisbane, Australia
- Posts 2,328

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Hi Stuart,
well that's a shame then, because really, it appears that the cause of the problem could be that they have a poor quality component ... are BeoLab 5 in your price range?
i do miss the 1's, but after going through my music collection with the 9's and getting used to their sound and aesthetics, they will be here to stay, they are wonderful speakers, so long as they last. When we pay this amount of money for speakers we should expect them to last longer than 7-10 years am i right? BeoLab speakers should last over 30 years, with the amount of development that goes into them, why make them to fail after just a decade >> as time goes on i become less and less enamoured with the B&O company, i must admit.
“Quality is never an accident; it is always the result of intelligent effort.”
Your health and well-being comes first and fore-most.
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Pattabhiraman



- Joined on 08-05-2007
- Bombay; India
- Posts 56

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hi dave,
i agree it was sparingly used given the previous owner travelled very frequently on work. it is during one of his visits he struck a deal on beolab 5 (time period when danish products were banned in the middle east owing to the cartoon controversy) and sold the beolab1 subsequently in as is condition.
having said the above i also use it very sparingly mostly during the weekends and tend to switch off the mains if my next use is not immediate.
aint sure if switching off the unit from the mains is also one of the factor leading to the failure.
ps stuart: can i request you to check with the technician specifically the reason behind such failures and measures to avoid them
cheers
pattabhi
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