Hello all,
A couple of days ago, I ran into a small problem. My right speaker was intermittently failing, sometimes it just started cracking, sometimes it would just stop and sometimes it would run fine for hours.
Now, because I was reluctant to replace my speakers (Tannoy Mercury M3 B/Eye), I decided that the problem was with my receiver (Kenwood KR-V5090).
I went down to the best local audio store I know of and purchased a second hand Yamaha amplifier, Yamaha A-560. After hooking it up, it worked swimmingly, beautiful sound, and for the first time in 10 or so years, I didn't have to dial up the volume to about 80% to watch a movie on my pc. So, I called it a win.
However, two days ago, the right speaker started to display all the same symptoms once more. And because I estimated the chance that two completely different amps, display the exact same fault, to be very low, I started testing other components to try and find the problem. Let me just summarize the things I've tried:
* updated audio drivers, and uninstalled the realtech audio manager (the latter is fairly useless for my use) -> made no difference
* replaced cable from motherboard to amp -> no difference
* tested the sound on headphones via amp output -> no difference
* tested the sound on headphones via motherboard output -> perfect sound
* hooked up different devices to the amp input cable (mp3 player and mobile phone) -> no difference
* tested another output port on my computer -> no difference
My conclusions:
* motherboard works fine
* cable from motherboard to pc works fine
* speakers work fine (else the sound on headphones would always be fine)
So, the only thing left for me to check, is the speaker cables. However, and this is why I post this thread, if my understanding of the amp is correct, this would not solve the problem. If the cables are faulty, then the sound from the amp on the headphones should be fine, right?
So my question is this:
What do you think the problem could be?
I must mention that because my funds are low, I cannot simply replace any of the more expensive components. If I did, I would've bought a new system right away