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Denon CD player
Got an interesting fault on a Denon DN-650F pro CD player. The XLR outputs
are fine - but both the phono and headphone outlets topless - although level seems normal. And all three are in parallel except for a 680 ohm resistor in series with the lines to the phonos and headphone outlet. I'm guessing it is something to do with the muting circuits - which seem to be separate for each output pairs. A relay for the XLR ones, transistors which short the lines for the phono, and a couple of op amps for the headphone one. Talk about complicated. ;-) -- *I have a degree in liberal arts -- do you want fries with that Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Denon CD player
Does seem od when a multi pole relay might have done the same job.
I have a Marantz cd player here which is having troubles finding the next track when this is manually selected. Its worse on home made cds, but can still happen on normal ones, it jiggles for what seeems a very short period then gives up showing the word error in the display, I'm told. It also skips about on cdrws which it played fine previously. Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... Got an interesting fault on a Denon DN-650F pro CD player. The XLR outputs are fine - but both the phono and headphone outlets topless - although level seems normal. And all three are in parallel except for a 680 ohm resistor in series with the lines to the phonos and headphone outlet. I'm guessing it is something to do with the muting circuits - which seem to be separate for each output pairs. A relay for the XLR ones, transistors which short the lines for the phono, and a couple of op amps for the headphone one. Talk about complicated. ;-) -- *I have a degree in liberal arts -- do you want fries with that Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Denon CD player
On 25/11/14 16:26, Brian Gaff wrote:
Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Have you cleaned the LASER head by hand (not one of those CD cleaners you play in the drive)? It is possible a very thin film over years is clouding it making tracking harder. |
Denon CD player
In article ,
Ar wrote: On 25/11/14 16:26, Brian Gaff wrote: Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Have you cleaned the LASER head by hand (not one of those CD cleaners you play in the drive)? It is possible a very thin film over years is clouding it making tracking harder. How would that affect the sound from the phono outputs but not the balanced ones? -- *Husbands should come with instructions Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Denon CD player
On 26/11/2014 16:43, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , Ar wrote: On 25/11/14 16:26, Brian Gaff wrote: Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Have you cleaned the LASER head by hand (not one of those CD cleaners you play in the drive)? It is possible a very thin film over years is clouding it making tracking harder. How would that affect the sound from the phono outputs but not the balanced ones? Ar seems to have been offering a solution to Brian's problem, not yours. As for your problem, you say the levels are normal, but there's an HF loss on two of the outputs? -- Tciao for Now! John. |
Denon CD player
In article ,
John Williamson wrote: On 26/11/2014 16:43, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Ar wrote: On 25/11/14 16:26, Brian Gaff wrote: Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Have you cleaned the LASER head by hand (not one of those CD cleaners you play in the drive)? It is possible a very thin film over years is clouding it making tracking harder. How would that affect the sound from the phono outputs but not the balanced ones? Ar seems to have been offering a solution to Brian's problem, not yours. As for your problem, you say the levels are normal, but there's an HF loss on two of the outputs? That's about it. Severe HF loss. I'm thinking it may be down to the muting circuits being partially activated. They are electronic on the two that are affected - but a relay on the balanced ones. So it is either on or off. -- *It was recently discovered that research causes cancer in rats* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Denon CD player
On 27/11/2014 00:10, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , John Williamson wrote: On 26/11/2014 16:43, Dave Plowman (News) wrote: In article , Ar wrote: On 25/11/14 16:26, Brian Gaff wrote: Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Have you cleaned the LASER head by hand (not one of those CD cleaners you play in the drive)? It is possible a very thin film over years is clouding it making tracking harder. How would that affect the sound from the phono outputs but not the balanced ones? Ar seems to have been offering a solution to Brian's problem, not yours. As for your problem, you say the levels are normal, but there's an HF loss on two of the outputs? That's about it. Severe HF loss. I'm thinking it may be down to the muting circuits being partially activated. They are electronic on the two that are affected - but a relay on the balanced ones. So it is either on or off. It's possibly too obvious, but have you checked the 680R resistors for high values and any capacitors for shorts? Or even a leaky connection/ switch on the switching inputs? I've found a circuit online, but they want me to pay for it.... -- Tciao for Now! John. |
Denon CD player
Hard to get at the laser lens in this model. It seems to be inside a plastic
sleeve wher the drawer goes in. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active "Ar" wrote in message ... On 25/11/14 16:26, Brian Gaff wrote: Maybe the laser is wearing out or the mechanics are sticky. Hard to tell. Have you cleaned the LASER head by hand (not one of those CD cleaners you play in the drive)? It is possible a very thin film over years is clouding it making tracking harder. |
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