Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
posted to rec.boats.electronics
|
|||
|
|||
Stereo system cutting out
Hi,
I have a Sony head unit (CDX-MP70) RMS 23x4 Peak 52x4. I have it hooked up to 4 Infinity Kappa 62.5i 6.5 speakers. When I turn up the volume maybe a little less than half way or more on the head unit the unit cuts out/shuts off, then in about 5 seconds it pops back on and continues playing, but will cut out again if I don't lower the volume. From what I understand the head unit should handle the speakers no problem. Can anyone shed some light on what might be the problem? The head unit (in the back) does get warm-hot but not real hot to the touch. No water damage or other phsyical damage has been done. Thanks for any info. -Matt |
#2
posted to rec.boats.electronics
|
|||
|
|||
Stereo system cutting out
"Matt" wrote in
: Hi, I have a Sony head unit (CDX-MP70) RMS 23x4 Peak 52x4. I have it hooked up to 4 Infinity Kappa 62.5i 6.5 speakers. When I turn up the volume maybe a little less than half way or more on the head unit the unit cuts out/shuts off, then in about 5 seconds it pops back on and continues playing, but will cut out again if I don't lower the volume. From what I understand the head unit should handle the speakers no problem. Can anyone shed some light on what might be the problem? The head unit (in the back) does get warm-hot but not real hot to the touch. No water damage or other phsyical damage has been done. Thanks for any info. -Matt Somewhere in the DC supply lines, including the negative side don't forget, there is a corroded connection in a plug, terminal block, fuse block or the fuse holder itself. At high volumes, a stereo draws a LOT of PEAK current through this corroded connection in series with the DC power supply. When an audio peak causes a peak voltage drop at the corrosion so high it leaves a less-than-acceptable voltage on the DC converter the unit runs its electronics off of, the unit's power supply faults and drops out because this peak load occurs at the same instant as the terribly low voltage droop......the unit shuts down on low voltage because there is a battery kill protect IC in it that won't let you run the car battery down so far you can't start the car just listening to the stereo....a sort of stupid user protection device. It won't drop out again after you cycle its power off then on again to reset it until the next high audio power peak repeats the condition and trips the battery saver circuit...... Take apart every plug, terminal block, fuse holder between the unit and the power panel or battery it's connected to. Clean all the contacts with emory cloth or just scraping until you shine up the metal then hose them all down with genuine WD-40, the finest contact cleaner on the planet. Restore the connections making sure you have them tightened down, but NOT OVERTIGHTENED so you break something with those big meathooks of hands. pinch the fuse holders a little so it's hard to get the fuse into them after polishing off the green crap you found corroding them all up. You'll probably find some cheap crimp connection all eaten away by the seawater in the bilge it dropped into. Replace the wire as well as all the submerged connections as the water ate all the wire inside the plastic shield because it had 12VDC on it and acted like a metal plating machine for months. IF it has a BREAKER, automatic or manual, and it STILL drops out after all this terminal cleaning....move the wire to another breaker and test again. You can't clean the corroded guts of the breaker so if moving the wire cured it you need to replace the corroded cheap breaker with another one.....uncorroded cheap breaker. Hose the breaker down before mounting it with WD-40 and it will protect the new breaker for about 5 more years. Be suspicious of your neighbors at the marina! They may have gotten fed up with that loud rap crap coming out of your cockpit speakers and sabotaged your power connections while you were ashore! It happens! |
#3
posted to rec.boats.electronics
|
|||
|
|||
Stereo system cutting out
Larry,
Great thanks for all the detailed help. I am going to check the connections and cross my fingers that that was the problem. Thanks again! ! "Larry" wrote in message ... "Matt" wrote in : Hi, I have a Sony head unit (CDX-MP70) RMS 23x4 Peak 52x4. I have it hooked up to 4 Infinity Kappa 62.5i 6.5 speakers. When I turn up the volume maybe a little less than half way or more on the head unit the unit cuts out/shuts off, then in about 5 seconds it pops back on and continues playing, but will cut out again if I don't lower the volume. From what I understand the head unit should handle the speakers no problem. Can anyone shed some light on what might be the problem? The head unit (in the back) does get warm-hot but not real hot to the touch. No water damage or other phsyical damage has been done. Thanks for any info. -Matt Somewhere in the DC supply lines, including the negative side don't forget, there is a corroded connection in a plug, terminal block, fuse block or the fuse holder itself. At high volumes, a stereo draws a LOT of PEAK current through this corroded connection in series with the DC power supply. When an audio peak causes a peak voltage drop at the corrosion so high it leaves a less-than-acceptable voltage on the DC converter the unit runs its electronics off of, the unit's power supply faults and drops out because this peak load occurs at the same instant as the terribly low voltage droop......the unit shuts down on low voltage because there is a battery kill protect IC in it that won't let you run the car battery down so far you can't start the car just listening to the stereo....a sort of stupid user protection device. It won't drop out again after you cycle its power off then on again to reset it until the next high audio power peak repeats the condition and trips the battery saver circuit...... Take apart every plug, terminal block, fuse holder between the unit and the power panel or battery it's connected to. Clean all the contacts with emory cloth or just scraping until you shine up the metal then hose them all down with genuine WD-40, the finest contact cleaner on the planet. Restore the connections making sure you have them tightened down, but NOT OVERTIGHTENED so you break something with those big meathooks of hands. pinch the fuse holders a little so it's hard to get the fuse into them after polishing off the green crap you found corroding them all up. You'll probably find some cheap crimp connection all eaten away by the seawater in the bilge it dropped into. Replace the wire as well as all the submerged connections as the water ate all the wire inside the plastic shield because it had 12VDC on it and acted like a metal plating machine for months. IF it has a BREAKER, automatic or manual, and it STILL drops out after all this terminal cleaning....move the wire to another breaker and test again. You can't clean the corroded guts of the breaker so if moving the wire cured it you need to replace the corroded cheap breaker with another one.....uncorroded cheap breaker. Hose the breaker down before mounting it with WD-40 and it will protect the new breaker for about 5 more years. Be suspicious of your neighbors at the marina! They may have gotten fed up with that loud rap crap coming out of your cockpit speakers and sabotaged your power connections while you were ashore! It happens! |
#4
posted to rec.boats.electronics
|
|||
|
|||
Stereo system cutting out
"Matt" wrote in
: Great thanks for all the detailed help. I am going to check the connections and cross my fingers that that was the problem. Thanks again! ! You're quite welcome....been there, cleaned that.... |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Connecting my DVD RCA jacks to the Aux-In of the Stereo | Electronics | |||
FS: Clarion Marine Stereo in NJ | Marketplace | |||
Need A New Stereo? | Electronics | |||
Stereo system recommendation | General | |||
Upgrading Radio / Stereo | General |