kevington118
Member
Hello, I'm a new member here. I've recently picked up a pair of Aerius speakers from someone who said that stopped working after being hit by a power surge. However, he was very vague about what exactly happened and didn't seem to have an electrical background so I'm trying to approach this repair with an open mind.
Started by searching Google, which led me to a few forums with people experiencing similar symptoms and finding various solutions. I tried vacuuming/showering the panels with no luck. I double checked all the terminations, all seemed to be secure. I removed the binding jumpers and fed signal to the woofer and panel separately, woofer output is comparable to the rest of my speakers while the panel is barely audible.
I removed all connections to the speakers and let them sit for a couple days. Then I opened the cabinets and visually checked over everything, no blown fuses, no burned resistors, no blown capacitors.
I then resorted to contacting ML customer service who gave me lots of diagrams and procedures for troubleshooting. The bias voltage check requires a 1 gig ohm resistor to prevent damage to the multimeter, so I'll be picking up one of those to perform that test next.
Is there anything else I can check in the meantime? Since opening the cabinet, I've checked all the components I can and nothing seems to be out of spec. Until I try the bias test, I'm stumped.
Any help or direction would be appreciated
Started by searching Google, which led me to a few forums with people experiencing similar symptoms and finding various solutions. I tried vacuuming/showering the panels with no luck. I double checked all the terminations, all seemed to be secure. I removed the binding jumpers and fed signal to the woofer and panel separately, woofer output is comparable to the rest of my speakers while the panel is barely audible.
I removed all connections to the speakers and let them sit for a couple days. Then I opened the cabinets and visually checked over everything, no blown fuses, no burned resistors, no blown capacitors.
I then resorted to contacting ML customer service who gave me lots of diagrams and procedures for troubleshooting. The bias voltage check requires a 1 gig ohm resistor to prevent damage to the multimeter, so I'll be picking up one of those to perform that test next.
Is there anything else I can check in the meantime? Since opening the cabinet, I've checked all the components I can and nothing seems to be out of spec. Until I try the bias test, I'm stumped.
Any help or direction would be appreciated