- Jul 10, 2007
- 12,041
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is it on its way out?
logitech z560's - crackle and pop at the slightest turn of the volume knob.
logitech z560's - crackle and pop at the slightest turn of the volume knob.
Turn the speakers off. Then turn the volume knob all the way up and down 20 times in a row really fast. Then try again.
(To get dust / dirt out of the volume controller)
logitech seems to make the worst speakers.
edit: What sound card do you have?
happens with klipsch/cambridge speakers as well.
pots pots pots...sucky sucky pots.
give the spray a try.
not sure why they are designed to suck that hard, maybe its a cheapness thing.
but even relatively cheap recievers with big old knobs tend not to develop the crackle pop like computer speakers do.
In the old days, back in the 8track era, the stereos had felt with slits cut into it that the shaft or slider would stick through to protect dust from getting into the pots. Now they just stick a plastic knob on the shaft and hope for the best.
Get Caig'd.
http://www.caig.com/
Never have a problem with noisy pots again!
Believe me when you have thousands of sliders/pots on a board that get changed daily during performances you CANNOT have crackle!
WD40 works when you can't get anything else.
Better gear uses conductive plastic pots instead of carbon.
Stuff these days is so cheaply made, however.
Turn the speakers off. Then turn the volume knob all the way up and down 20 times in a row really fast. Then try again.
(To get dust / dirt out of the volume controller)
The volume pot probably has some dust in it. Compressed air while turning the pot clockwise and counterclockwise should help.
logitech seems to make the worst speakers.
edit: What sound card do you have?
Turn the speakers off. Then turn the volume knob all the way up and down 20 times in a row really fast. Then try again.
(To get dust / dirt out of the volume controller)
Yep. My two best friends when dealing with old stereo gear. By old, I mean from the 70s or earlier. Kids these days....DeoxIt and FaderLube.