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In Reply to: RE: Dynaco A-25 problem. posted by Tadlo on December 03, 2016 at 12:53:55
Hi Tadlo,
The way I test my A-25 tweeters without anything special is that I take a fresh 9 volt battery and put a wire from the positive terminal of the battery to the positive lead of the tweeter and vice versa with the negative terminal(s). If the tweeter is working you will hear a distinct clicking sound.
If the tweeter checks ok use the 9 volt battery on each position of the switch, the positive side with a wire attached to each 5 positions of the switch and see if you get the clicking noise. Keep the negative battery wire connected to the negative tweeter terminal and use that positive wire attached to the battery as a probe and touch each wire from all 5 resistors and the capacitor and I think you can find the culprit in your crossover. All the guys before me covered the cleaning.
I have an example of the A-25 crossover in my hand and I can easily follow the positive ends of the cap and resistors by following the wires from the red binding post on the back. My cap is non-polarized 8 uF 25 volts and if any of the previous guys think the 9 volt battery will do any harm they should speak up. I just wait to hear the clicking tweeter sound then back off. I have not damaged anything yet....good luck and go find that problem...Mark Korda PS...It's the same as a continuity test with a multimeter. If you do have a multimeter you could attach the wires of the battery to the cap for a minute or so then use your multimeter and measure the caps DC volts and watch your meter to see if the cap holds some voltage and slowly dissipates it. You know it's best to replace it but it might be a fun experiment anyway...Mark.
Follow Ups:
Thanks for the information and advice. Before I saw your battery suggestion I tried using the wires from an amp with music playing at a low level. The tweeter definitely is working. It seems that the signal is getting through the resistors and that the only thing interrupting the signal to the tweeter is the capacitor. Is it possible when a cap fails for it to totally interrupt a signal trying to get through it?
Hi, just jump the cap out with a piece of wire etc and play at a low level again and see if it works.
Thanks. That is basically what I did.
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