brooksmoses: (anime-me)
[personal profile] brooksmoses
So. My stereo amplifier -- a quite heavy old beast in brushed aluminum and faux rosewood that I got for free when a professor I knew was upgrading his system -- has been having intermittent problems. I recently found the manual for it, and the manual said that these problems can come from problems in the speakers or speaker wires, so I decided to test it for a while with the speakers unplugged.

This, of course, raises a small problem. How does one actually test it without speakers? Well, it's got a headphone jack. And I've got a pair of cheap giveaway airline headphones handy.... So I plugged in the headphones, put a CD of Mannheim Steamroller into the changer, and cranked it up a bit. And it's actually about the right volume to listen to.

The right volume to listen to ... in the room.

So I sat the headphones on the desk, and listened to it for a while, until the tinniness started to drive [livejournal.com profile] suzimoses batty. Out of curiousity, I went to go look and see where exactly I had the volume set. It was set on 14. On a scale that goes up to 20.

So, yeah, before I plug the speakers in, I think I'll turn it back down. To eleven.

Date: 2006-11-11 09:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] necturus.livejournal.com
The problem with your test is that unless the headphone jack is directly wired in parallel with the main amplifier output, it's probably possible for the speaker outputs to fail intermittently without affecting the headphones.

How big is the amp? Lacking anything like a pair of 8-ohm power resistors capable of absorbing 100 watts or so, my suggestion would be to try incandescent light bulbs.
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