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Anonymous Posted on Dec 13, 2013

Cambridge Soundworks PSW-1 powered subwoofer hum

Hum when signal is applied. Amplifier seems to have problem.

3 Related Answers

Anonymous

  • 1 Answer
  • Posted on Jun 04, 2010

SOURCE: loud hum out of BaseCube 12 subwoofer

Actually I"m having the same problem. It is most probably the capacitors on the power supply internally. they are known to dry out and go back. cheap easy fix by a competent electronics repair facility. Also Cambridge will fix it for $75 plus shipping

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Mike Cairns

  • 3054 Answers
  • Posted on Jul 07, 2011

SOURCE: How can I replace a

Its pretty simple actually.
If you already have the same size new tweeter. You take off of course the large felt cover so speakers are exposed on front. Just like your picture is in this post. Then you should see some screws, most likely it is going to be Phillips. Then unscrew all the screws, the whole front should slide out with of course speakers still attached, don't pull out to fast or far, to make sure the internal wires are long enough to take whole front out and set aside speaker box, the on back of speaker should be two wires going to it, maybe three if is tapped in conjunction with a ground. Anyway on back of speaker unplug the wire from speaker and then, take out screws which is normally on back of speaker, pull speaker out, put new one in and repeat steps in reverse order. Hope this helps. Mike

idrvnsx2

Michael Edwards

  • 60 Answers
  • Posted on Aug 27, 2012

SOURCE: I believe that the amplifier

Edwards Electronics on ebay repairs these amps - contact them for pricing ;)

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Related Questions:

0helpful
2answers

Why does my HTS-20 powered subwoofer make a low hum when plugged in, even turned off and not connected to the receiver and a louder hum when the subwoofer power is turned on?

I suspect the amplifier is damaged. This is not an easy repair to do unless you are well versed in audio electronics. I would recommend a repair shop to look at the subwoofer amplifier.
1helpful
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JLB PSW-D110 Subwoofer Issues

Hi,
Hummmm is from Output amplifier and you need to replace it because power supply blow it too.
0helpful
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I have atomic A-8 subwoofer and philips FR740 receiver. when i turn the amplifier and the subwoofer "on", the subwoofer starts to hum loudly and it is wery annoying. i made all the connections...

The symptom sounds like an open signal shield somewhere and the cable is acting like an antenna for airborne electrical noise.

Disconnect the RCA cable at the sub. Is it still humming? NO? Problem is external to it. YES? Internal. Broken ground somewhere.

Recheck all connections making sure to twist the RCA head as you install it so oxides will be worn off.

Consider what may have changed in the environment regarding electrical devices, motors, magnetic sources. Ensure signal and speaker wires as ar not running are as non-parallel to any power cords as practicable.
0helpful
1answer

My Cambridge Soundworks PSW 12"

Take it out and look at it if you're going to replace it anyway.

or

Get a whole new speaker for cheap...

http://twintiers.craigslist.org/ele/2281123193.html

or

Call 800 376-4434 USA or 800 525-4434 Canada for factory assistance. (It's printed right on the back.)
0helpful
1answer

After a power outage I have a loud hum.

Hi, The Ground Rules Of all the annoyances that can afflict any audio/video home theater or even a simple stereo installation, the notorious "ground loop" may well be the most difficult and persistent one to track down and eliminate. A "ground loop" is caused by the difference in electrical potential at different grounding points in an audio/video system. (All the grounds in an A/V system should ideally be at "0" potential.) A ground loop typically adds a loud low-frequency hum or buzz as soon as you plug in any of various audio or video components, including subwoofers, cable-TV outboard boxes, satellite-TV feeds, TV displays, amplifiers, A/V receivers or turntables. The buzz/hum is a byproduct of the multiple power supply cables and a ground voltage differential within your system and its network of interconnecting cables.

Here are some methods to help you get rid of ground loops. Try these first and don't waste money on a power "conditioner" which, in most cases, won't help. (There is no need to "condition" the AC power for your system. Your receiver or amplifier already has a power supply with its own filters and transformers. No further filtering is normally required.)

If you get your system up and running and hear an audible buzz or hum, the first culprit to look at is either the powered subwoofer or your cable-TV or satellite-box feed at the entry point to your system.

First, the subwoofer: unplug the coaxial cable that connects to your powered subwoofer to see if the ground-loop hum disappears. If it does, it's likely coming in through your cable/satellite TV feed.

Reconnect your subwoofer's coaxial cable from the subwoofer input to your receiver's subwoofer output and disconnect the cable-TV feed (or satellite feed) from your outboard set-top cable box or satellite tuner. Be sure and disconnect the cable before any splitters. Now see if the hum/buzz from your subwoofer stops.

If that eliminates the hum, you can install one of these inexpensive in-line ground isolators from Parts Express or Bass Home. Note that these transformer-based ground isolators will work fine with analog cable-TV feeds, but depending on their design they may interfere with or block reception of HDTV signals via a digital cable or satellite dish feed.

Install the ground isolator between the cable-TV feed and the input of your outboard cable-TV box or satellite tuner (or the TV display's antenna or cable input if you have a set with a built-in TV tuner or a cable-card ready set). In many cases, the ground isolator will "break" the loop and remove the annoying hum or buzz by isolating the TV-cable ground.

If a hum remains with the TV cable completely disconnected from your system, or you don't want to risk degrading reception of HD signals from a cable or satellite system, then you may have to add a ground isolator like this Radio Shack Model 270-054 between the line-level coaxial subwoofer cable from your A/V receiver and the line-level input jack on your powered subwoofer.

In all cases, if your subwoofer has a ground-lift screw like some of Axiom's subwoofers, try first removing the screw (or replacing it) to see if it increases or eliminates the hum. It may or may not make a difference.

If you do not have easy access to the aforementioned ground isolators, here are a few more tips:

Try plugging the subwoofer into a different AC outlet in the room, one that isn't supplying power to your components (A/V receiver, TV, cable box, etc.). That might fix it.

Try reversing the AC plug for your A/V receiver or the powered subwoofer. If it's a 3-wire plug or a polarized plug, which has one prong wider than the other, you won't be able to reverse the plug. For safety, do not use a "cheater plug" to bypass the 3-wire plug.

With the power OFF, reverse the AC plugs one by one of any other components that have a standard 2-prong AC plug that isn't polarized. Each time you reverse a plug, turn on the system with the attached component and your subwoofer and see if the hum disappears. In some cases, reversing one or more plugs will eliminate the hum.

If you have a turntable, try connecting a separate ground wire to a chassis screw on your preamp or receiver and see if the hum disappears. If you already have a turntable ground wire, try removing it from the preamp. One or the other may eliminate the hum.

Finally, here is another solution that worked well for a member of our message boards who decided to discard his ground-loop isolator on his subwoofer: "I took off the ground-loop isolator I'd been using and connected a plain 14-gauge wire to chassis screws on the sub and the receiver then powered everything on. Although hum was still there, it was far lower than before. Next I unscrewed the ground-loop screw on the back of the sub and that took care of the hum completely."

Almost certainly sounds like an earth loop to me, but can be caused by a poorly made transformer or phase shifts on the mains supply. Visit some power conditioner web-sites like Isotek or Isol-8 (or google "earth loop") where there's plenty of advice on how to reduce/eliminate earth loops and other causes of mains-induced hum (transformer problems etc).

Hum on the speakers usually indicates that there is a DC voltage on the speaker line. DC voltage on the output lines would be caused by a shorted output transistor.


Have a nice day...
1helpful
1answer

Loud humming noise

this may be result of blown capacitor - have it analyzed by applying strong magnet over the inside speaker , if humming persists, then its not blown capacitor -- the capacitor stores energy, and if that energy is lossed an out in the airwaves, thats the humming effect
0helpful
1answer

Subwoofer hums

This can often be described as "ground loop hum." Which essentially means that the circuit providing power is not properly grounded at the electrical and/or signal source and it introduces noise.

If it is connected by a coaxial cable, move one end of it's terminals by twisting it while it is plugged into the connector. If it produces static or the hum goes away then it is the coaxial connection of the end you are twisting...it is either not tight enough or seating in deep enough, or it is a faulty cable. If none of those testing methods suffice, try plugging the subs' amp into a different outlet, or, into a surge protection device with noise canceling circuitry such as made by Tripplite. Other sources of the noise can also come from the amp being powered by the same house circuit as such things as your refrigerator, fans, fluorescent lighting, microwaves or any device with an electric motor.
1helpful
1answer

My Polk PSW 303 subwoofer emits a hum when plugged in and powered off. When the unit is turned on the hum gets louder. At this point the unit is useless. Does anyone know what could be causing this?

Hiya sounds alot like there is a power supply issue with the unit that will require repair for it to be doing off or on. Probably wont be to expensive, request a quote first to make sure viable.

Best of luck
1helpful
1answer

P200 Subwoofer all quiet

Try taking tha cable out of the amplifier and touching it, this should create a low hum, as your body is sending throug a small current. if this works then you may have accidently switched the sub woffer on in the amplefier. if however you get nothing through the sub then you may have a dry joint in the solder, or the board may be dead. Other option, try an other cable. they also use lead based solder so they do get old.
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