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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
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Hi Francoisvl I recently had a similar problem on the BM5000 and the answer in my case was very simple. There is a flexible connection between the case and the panel which was broken. Initially, it looked to be OK from the outside but I found that the copper braids inside had actually cracked. None of the keystrokes on the panel were working and this
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I have three LC2 units, two of which are working well and one that gave up the ghost a number of years ago. The broken LC2 simply would not power up a lamp under any circumstances and had no control functionality at all. Last week, I decided to explore the insides of an LC2 and took the broken unit apart. After a brief look at the internals, I then
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When I start up my BC9000, two red lights come on, one on the upper part at the right side and the other on the centre at the left side. After four or five seconds, the left one goes out. All is normal so far. With the single light on indicating standby mode you should still be able to get some response from the keyboard even though there is no tape
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Peter is spot on. I have just updated my BM6000, first opened it up to check to see that there was a small PCB behind the cover of the IR receiver, everything was there but had no idea whether it would work. Eventually bought the 2035 remote from another Beoworld member and was extremely surprised when it all worked first time. Since then, have never
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Thanks Martin, at least I now understand where the second board fits in. It certainly has 3 IC's as you mentioned. So far, all of the diagrams in both the 1900 and 2400 manuals refer to the single IC board and they also provide a very good description of how it all works.. My old 1900 also has the simple board which is easy to work with and I am
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I have a volume control problem on this machine but it should be fairly straightforward to fix. The volume up works OK but there is no volume down response. I downloaded the relevant service manual from the site and that is where the confusion starts. The cover of the manual says "Beomaster 2400, Type 2901". My machine is the Beomaster 2400
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Latest update Thought that I would let you know that I did manage to remove the entire sliding assembly without breaking anything. That small PCB was able to be taken out after slackening off all of the wires, providing just enough room to solder on a new lamp. The old lamp had a broken wire, right on the entry point on the globe. All has been re-assembled
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Thanks for the tips Phil, very helpful indeed, I'll give it a go when I get back home from overseas. Geoff
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Thanks for all of the input. It is becoming apparent that there is no quick way to access that particular PCB from above, so I think that I have no option but to remove the complete sliding assembly and access the connections from below. I was trying to avoid doing that because I know that there is a high risk that the plastic supports are going to
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Thanks for the acknowledgement Jandyt, I never thought that I had asked such a difficult and testing question. Anyway, the PCB is still inside his home and I won't move it until I get some good advice. Can't believe no one has done this job before. Thanks again for the reply, my confidence was disappearing fast, put me down as a strong contender
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