2023-10-15 - Fixing Broken Loudspeakers

I recently started trying to get better at soldering and general 
electronics repairs.  Currently, I'm going through my collection of old 
speakers, most of which I got for free because people were getting rid 
of them. A lot of them had damaged cables and/or scratchy volume knobs. 
They're mainly cheap PC speakers that really aren't worth anything, but 
I thought it would be a fun project to fix them up and maybe even make 
some of them better than new.

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One set of speakers is USB-powered and had damaged cables, some of 
which I had already fixed before. I decided to actually improve the 
design on these and replace the soldered-on cables with connectors so 
the cables are separate. In this case, the secondary speaker already 
was connected to the main one with an RCA connector, but there was only 
a connector on the side of the main speaker. This cable was already 
damaged, so I would have had to replace it anyways, and I decided that 
I might as well add an RCA jack to the secondary speaker instead so the 
two speakers could be connected with a standard RCA cable[1]. I had to 
glue the jack in because it didn't have a nut to fasten it (although I 
made the hole so tight that it was already fastened pretty securely 
anyways).

The cables coming out of the main speaker were still working, but I 
decided to replace them with proper connectors while I was at it. One 
of them had actually been replaced previously because it was broken[2]. 
I replaced the audio cable with a 3.5mm jack and the power cable with a 
5.5mm/2.1mm jack (I could have used pretty much anything for this, but 
these were the first connectors I found). I then connected a matching 
plug to the USB cable that originally came with the speakers. Now there 
aren't any cables connected directly to the speakers, so the cables can 
be exchanged very easily[3]. The connectors I used actually had nuts to 
screw them on, but unfortunately I put the 3.5mm connector in a 
position where the nut didn't fit, so I had to glue it in[4]. This 
time, I also remembered to put on some heat-shrink tubing to make it 
all look a bit more professional.

A small note: Many speakers have thin nuts behind the volume knobs that 
need to be unscrewed to open them or remove the circuit board. In this 
case, a nut had to be unscrewed to remove the circuit board so I could 
solder the connections properly. I usually use needle-nose pliers for 
this because none of my other tools fit into the small hole containing 
the nut[5].

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The other issue with many old speakers (and other audio equipment) is 
scratchy volume knobs. There are approximately a million different 
methods people use to fix these. Some people just spray some sort of 
contact cleaner into the potentiometers, but apparently some of the 
chemicals people use are very aggressive and destroy the potentiometer 
completely over time. I really don't know what the best method is, but 
I eventually decided to just open them up properly, clean them with 
isopropyl alcohol, and then add some silicone grease to protect the 
inside from corrosion[6][7][8]. You can send me angry emails if you 
think this is a horrible method. I did this with two speaker sets. The 
first one required desoldering to open the potentiometers, the second 
one let me open them without desoldering. I actually first sprayed 
contact cleaner into the potentiometers of the first speaker set, which 
seemed to fix the scratching, but after reading about the dangers of 
doing this, I decided to open and clean them properly. Both speaker 
sets now seem to be working properly, so it just remains to be seen how 
long this state lasts.

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Anyways, that concludes a short description of my current project. It 
probably isn't really worth the effort considering that these are just 
cheap speakers that no one really wants, but it's better than leaving 
them under my bed in their broken state.

[1] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/speaker_left_inside.jpg
[2] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/speaker_right_before.jpg
[3] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/speakers.jpg
[4] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/speaker_right_inside.jpg
[5] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/pliers.jpg
[6] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/potentiometer.jpg
[7] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/potentiometer_open.jpg
[8] gopher://lumidify.org/I/phlog/2023-10-15-speakers/potentiometer_greased.jpg