The audio on one of my Eumig S940s has been misbehaving a bit recently, with what can only be described as a 'crackle' underlying the sound which comes and goes. Sometimes you can have a night free of it, other times it's there, constantly.
There's also been a bit of hum too. This is unusual because the Eumig S936/938/940 are far better in that regard than the 800 series Eumigs, where the hum seems to have been part of the original spec (!). I thought I would get round to adjusting the hum buck coils at some point to reduce it.
Mindful of the fact that these machines are 40 years old now, I figured the capacitors on the audio board would be ready for replacement. Luckily I can get these swapped out at work and that's what I had done on Friday. There were about eight or ten of the bigger values that were replaced; only one of them had gone out of spec and not by much. The result was night and day however; the crackle has now completely disappeared, and to my great surprise, the hum vanished too. Bass was better and the whole sound experience was transformed.
Steve Klare will be able to explain this sort of thing better than me, but capacitors are the one component on a circuit board that degrade over time, and they degrade faster if a machine is unused. This sort of thing can probably be done by an audio technician if you can't do this sort of thing yourself (I can't), and it's certainly worth having done. I'm going to have them replaced on all my projectors, whether there's a problem with the sound or not.
There's also been a bit of hum too. This is unusual because the Eumig S936/938/940 are far better in that regard than the 800 series Eumigs, where the hum seems to have been part of the original spec (!). I thought I would get round to adjusting the hum buck coils at some point to reduce it.
Mindful of the fact that these machines are 40 years old now, I figured the capacitors on the audio board would be ready for replacement. Luckily I can get these swapped out at work and that's what I had done on Friday. There were about eight or ten of the bigger values that were replaced; only one of them had gone out of spec and not by much. The result was night and day however; the crackle has now completely disappeared, and to my great surprise, the hum vanished too. Bass was better and the whole sound experience was transformed.
Steve Klare will be able to explain this sort of thing better than me, but capacitors are the one component on a circuit board that degrade over time, and they degrade faster if a machine is unused. This sort of thing can probably be done by an audio technician if you can't do this sort of thing yourself (I can't), and it's certainly worth having done. I'm going to have them replaced on all my projectors, whether there's a problem with the sound or not.
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