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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
Latest post 04-20-2011 5:11 AM by falstaff. 12 replies.
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04-11-2011 9:34 AM
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falstaff
- Joined on 04-11-2011
- Posts 7
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Hi, my beloved Beocenter 9000 suddenly died on me. It is a beautiful piece of kit, which I will probably keep for it's aesthetic value alone..but naturally, I would prefer that it worked, so I wonder, does anyone out there have any idea what might cause an abrupt and total failure like this? I came to use it one day, and found the screens were dead...no lights at all. No sound, no opening doors, absolutely no function. I have fixed many TVs, PCs and other electrical stuff, usually by looking very closely for broken solder joints, burnt out components..blown caps and so on.....with this unit, I have checked for everything I can think of....fuses, circuit boards, damaged components etc. All seem ok, and yet there's no function. When you power up, the cd and tape drives spin for a second or so, and then stop. The only interesting thing I have noticed, concerns the relays. There are three that are easily seen: the first (1) is directly behind the transformer coil...the second,(2) to the right of the coil, and the third, to the right of the cd drive. When I power up I notice that relay (1) activates and remains activated, whereas, on a working Beocenter 9000, I have access to, this relay only activates for a second or so, before switching back to it's unpowered state. I notice also, that relay(2) only activates some of the time.....beyond that, the machine remains inscrutable. If anyone has any idea what I should be looking for here, I would be delighted to hear from them. My thanks in advance. Peter
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falstaff
- Joined on 04-11-2011
- Posts 7
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Hi, and thanks for the input I will pull that board out and go over it in the next day or two I'll let you know how it goes.
Cheers Peter
Blackrix:
Try to resolder the power PCB, which is located behind the CD mechanism. I have had a BeoCenter 9500 in repair with the same problem, after resoldering this PCB it came back to life!
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raybody
- Joined on 03-16-2008
- Posts 10
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sounds more like the cpu has problems,
i believe Quality Dream Audio sell them and will even do the repair for you on a no fix no fee bases.
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falstaff
- Joined on 04-11-2011
- Posts 7
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Hi, and thankyou for your suggestion. When you say resoldering.....you mean generally, board by board, or just the cpu? If the latter, where does it live, and am I likely to do it any harm by heating it up?
Regards Peter
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joeyboygolf
- Joined on 04-16-2007
- Ely, Cambridgeshire, UK
- Posts 3,252
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..........the microprocessor may need re-soldering!!!!!!! I don't think so.
This sounds like a power supply or perhaps a relay problem but you really do need to take it to someone who can take some sensible measurements.
Where are you??
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falstaff
- Joined on 04-11-2011
- Posts 7
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Yes, this is the way I'm thinking now...all the easy/obvious possibilities exhausted. I'm in Salisbury, and I gather there is a B&O dealer in Wimborne, not too far away, so I will probably run it down to him.
Regards and thanks for the input
Peter
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falstaff
- Joined on 04-11-2011
- Posts 7
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Spoke to the closest B&O agent, and as you predicted, he told me that it would likely be uneconomical to repair, so I might try and find Nobby and have a word with him. Thanks for the suggestion.
Peter
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