I just picked up a Harman Kardon 330B receiver. It powers up, but no sound comes out. I checked the 2 speaker fuses and they are both open. Before I replace them, can anyone offer any advice as to what I ought to check, or does anyone know of an issue these old receivers had with blowing the speaker fuses?
Thanks.
Mike
Thanks.
Mike
hello
I should search diyaudio.com for 330B
http://www.google.com/search?q=+site:diyaudio.com+330b
found this interesting post
http://manuals.harman.com/hk/Service Manual/HK330b sm.pdf
Why does speaker fuses blow in one amplifier output?
If one is blown, we can guess a shortcut of the output terminals, in that channel.
If both are blown, we may look for the answer in the amplifier.
Depeding on the amplifier this can be several causes.
- DC offset on output
- Oscillation on output
... and a number of other things
What we know, is that it takes high current to blow one fuse.
To blow two fuses, it takes two high currents
I should search diyaudio.com for 330B
http://www.google.com/search?q=+site:diyaudio.com+330b
found this interesting post
In the same topic you can download Service Manual. From Harman-KardonAlgar_emi said:http://www.diyaudio.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=18418
I just found in the garbage (incredible what people are putting to garbage) a nice Harman-Kardon 330B.
I just put the 2 speaker fuses in, then the amp works just fine.
The tuner seems ok too. It has a discrete phono stage, separate bass/treble adjustement for left and right, AM-FM, aux input (for CD) and even a preamp output. It is all discrete amp and tuner.
I would like to have the service manual or just the schematic in case it breaks down.
I'll give it to one of my boys for Christmas.
Thanks in advance.
http://manuals.harman.com/hk/Service Manual/HK330b sm.pdf
Why does speaker fuses blow in one amplifier output?
If one is blown, we can guess a shortcut of the output terminals, in that channel.
If both are blown, we may look for the answer in the amplifier.
Depeding on the amplifier this can be several causes.
- DC offset on output
- Oscillation on output
... and a number of other things
What we know, is that it takes high current to blow one fuse.
To blow two fuses, it takes two high currents
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