T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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24.1 | Did you say what I thought you did or ? | VAXWRK::SWARD | Compromise? Sure, we'll do it my way. | Wed Aug 10 1988 21:38 | 11 |
|
I hope that you didn't mean this:
> Thought at first it was the speaker, but I changed them over and
> the distortion moved too. There's no distortion through the headphones,
> so I guess it must be the amp (??).
If you changed the speaker over and the distortion moved then the
speaker is gone...
Peter
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24.2 | Only if you sub amplifier. | LARVAE::JEFFERY | Even the white bits are black | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:07 | 14 |
|
If you do decide it is the amp, then there shouldn't be TOO much
trouble changing it. As long as the amp connects to other components
using phono plugs, and has standard speaker connects, then you should
be able to substitute another amplifier in its place.
The only fly in the ointment comes if the amp receives other control
signals from the tuner/cassette deck etc. However with the addition
of a standard CD player, it doesn't look like you will have any
problems.
Good luck.
Mark.
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24.3 | must be the speaker.... | ERIC::SALLITT | A legend in his lunchtime | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:54 | 10 |
| re .0, I agree with .1; especially since headphone signals, almost
without exception, are derived from the speaker outputs.
If it is the speaker, then there are several good speakers you can
replace them with which will probably outperform the standard Aiwa
speakers by a mile, and you shouldn't have spend over #100.
Let us know how you get on.
Dave
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24.4 | OK, I'm awake now ... | YIPPEE::BUXTON | Steve Buxton - EAITG Valbonne | Thu Aug 11 1988 12:10 | 22 |
| RE : .1, .3 - Damn ! Blast ! Of course, I meant when I change the
speakers over the distortion stays in the same place, but now on
the other speaker (that's what you get for writing notes at 10pm...)
RE : .2, I'd really like to replace it with something almost exactly
the same, for 2 reasons - first, there are signals from other devices
involved (except the CD player, which is counted as "foreign").
e.g there is autorecord, which puts the cassette into pause until
the record is cued, there's a timer which will wake you up with
a casette etc.
Second, it all fits together in this neat little cabinet, and if
I get anything different I'll have to break that up and scatter
my components around.
Thanks for the quick replies, but I'm still looking for that AIWA
spares/repairs shop ...
Cheers,
- Steve B.
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24.5 | oh alright then.... | ERIC::SALLITT | A legend in his lunchtime | Thu Aug 11 1988 13:44 | 6 |
| re .4, just to clear up a couple of points....
you say the problem gets worse with volume? Does the problem occur
with all sources, i.e. cassette, record, radio?
Dave
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24.6 | More details ... | YIPPEE::BUXTON | Steve Buxton - EAITG Valbonne | Thu Aug 11 1988 16:03 | 11 |
|
Yes, if the volume is very low it's unnoticeable, if it's very loud
one speaker is almost entirely noise.
Yes, with all inputs - record, tape, CD. Though some tapes/records/CD's
sound worse than others.
Does this help ?
- Steve B.
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24.7 | | XNOGOV::JCH | John Haxby. Definitively Wrong | Thu Aug 11 1988 16:59 | 10 |
| I used to have this on an old Teleton you could fry eggs on: every
so often half the final power stage used to die. The death throes
were remarkably like what you describe.
I used to replace the power stage about once a month towards at
one stage then I had a closer look and found that a BC107 in the
previous stage had gone doolally. By that stage though I bought
the Crimson and lost interest!
jch
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24.8 | Some more checks.... | ERIC::SALLITT | A legend in his lunchtime | Thu Aug 11 1988 17:06 | 15 |
| re .6...
Can you record OK from radio/LP/CD? You can check this by listening
via the headphone output of your cassette machine or - if your cassette
deck doesn't sport a headphone jack - by playing back in another
machine or your car. If this works OK then the power amp side of
your Aiwa is naff; if not then it's the preamp side. You'll still
need a dealer, though, unless Aiwa will give/sell you a service
manual and you know how to use it.
When you swapped over speakers, did you just physically move them around,
or did you swap the connectors over on the back of the amp? The
spring connectors used on a lot of oriental amps leave a lot to
be desired, so check these out before getting despondent!
Dave
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24.9 | and more... | ERIC::SALLITT | A legend in his lunchtime | Thu Aug 11 1988 17:13 | 8 |
| I just read your base note again, Steve. I'd look very closely at
your speaker connections at the amp and speaker, and maybe the
cables. I say this because you say headphones work OK, and these
are usually (but not always) tapped off via resistors just before
the speaker connections - if this is so, then your amp must be OK
for 99%of its innards.
Dave
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24.10 | Stick with Aiwa | LARVAE::JEFFERY | Even the white bits are black | Thu Aug 11 1988 18:02 | 12 |
| As the Aiwa has extra control stuff, it looks like you will have
to get another Aiwa amplifier. Does the new Aiwa stuff conform to
these "standards" ?
My father has a Sony Midi system that does this as well. It connects
up with Ribbon Cable, and does auto pause on the cassette recorder.
Automatically changes source when you operate cassette, tuner etc.
Stick with Aiwa then.
Mark.
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24.11 | Let AIWA fix it? | SEDOAS::KORMAN | TGIF | Fri Aug 12 1988 14:54 | 9 |
| Why not take it up to AIWA to be fixed?
Aiwa (UK) Ltd
Dukes Industrial Estate
Great West Road
Dave K
|