Originally posted by chony:
Thanks Barry,
I figured that maybe the power (fuse / amp) for both the woofer and tweeter, were powered from the same source - and that that source might be the problem.
I 'cleaned' the headphone socket with pressurized air, with cotton buds, and inserted a plug in ten or twenty times!
Chony,
You're welcome; hopefully we can help you figure out what the problem is.
As Gary said, what you did to clean the headphone jack might not do the trick. The jack contacts are "springy", and normally held closed when no plug is inserted. That, and their positioning in the jack, makes cleaning them somewhat difficult. Also, I've experienced metal fatigue/fracture in jack switch contacts, causing them to no longer make contact; no amount of cleaning will fix that.
If the jack is accessible, and you can determine which contacts to short together, what Gary suggested is the way to diagnose the jack. I don't know any details of the
8000's headphone jack arrangement; in fact,
headphone jacks come in various forms, with some having wires soldered directly while others are mounted to a pc board. (BTW, if it's on a pc board, you might check for a possibly bad solder connection there.) A switching-type headphone jack typically has 5 connections; one of them is common (ground), and connects to a plug's sleeve when it's inserted. Two would connect to a plug's tip and ring, and the remaining two are the L & R speaker-switch connections. If you can't determine which are which, I'd suggest NOT randomly jumping them to troubleshoot the problem.
I mentioned the chance (unlikely though it is) of both tweeter and woofer being out because it's not impossible. In fact, what sometimes happens is that a tweeter fails first, but it isn't immediately noticed. (Please don't take this as a reflection on your hearing or powers of observation!) Then, when the woofer goes, it becomes very obvious, because the entire side is out. Swapping speaker wiring, as Roel suggested, could allow you to eliminate (or verify) that cause.
Although I don't have a schematic for the 8000 to help confirm this, the fact that the headphones work on both channels makes it highly unlikely that much is wrong. Unless there are speaker fuses in-circuit after the headphone jack, a blown fuse isn't a cause to consider.
Best of luck.
Edit: Chony,I just saw your response to Gary, which you posted while I was writing the above. If you have a means of posting photos of the headphone jack "wiring" (soldering to the board, etc.), I could probably tell you which to try jumping. If you don't care about headphone jack speaker switching operation, that could be made permanent. However, since you referred to the jack as being "welded" in place (I'm sure you meant "soldered"
), perhaps you could have a friend help with this.
--Barry
[This message has been edited by quietDIN (edited 07-18-2005).]