Crossover help?


Hi to all I'm hoping someone might be able to help.

I've tried to upgrade components within my crossover and now have no HF signal.

The tweeter checks out.

I've searched for bad joints , shorts etc but can find nothing obvious.

Today I've pulled the upgraded components from the Hf circuit but still have nothing.

Using a continuity test its all good up to the main cap and after back to the terminal.

I do get a bleep from both terminals so assume thats the parallel resistor.

I'm at a loss as to why its gone completely dead.

Anyone got ideas how to check the network front to back with only a basic multimeter?

 

Thanks in advance if someone has some ideas

Regards Ian

 

notdeadyet

Same thing , if you lost memory and call doctor, he is not help you , untill to visit to him. 

Are you sure the tweeter is functional, did you disconnect all drivers prior to soldering. If you're getting continuity from binding post to speaker terminal has to be tweeter. if you applied too much heat for too long you may have fried something. Should always use heat sink, anti heat paste around fine gauge wiring.

Hi Thanks for the reply.

The crossover was removed completely.

The tweeter is still fine, checked.

I don't have any form of heat sink, i have previously soldered much smaller components with success.

The only items removed/replaced are resistors and a caps.

The continuity is from HF +/- which is assume to be the parallel resistor?

 

Regards Ian

I'm assuming you're talking about a passive crossover within your speakers, correct? Could you post some photos? Or a schematic of the original crossover? We can figure this out with just a multimeter.

I do get a bleep from both terminals so assume thats the parallel resistor.

I think you wired the high pass crossover wrong. If there’s a parallel resistor, it should be after the capacitor and connect across the tweeter +/- terminal.

If the parallel resistor wired in front of the capacitor across the input side +/- terminal you will get a bleep on continuity test. If that’s the case, the resistor "shorted" the high pass crossover input hence no HF signal reach the tweeter.