I like that it as least has some kind of self-diagnostics - I was unlucky having two Onkyo's with the infamous Texas Instrument DTS chip. No error msg, just no sound and no speaker-relay click. The first one was fixed in extended warranty, the other one (TX-NR808) still works (never failed). Thanks for the video.
You did an excellent repair :-D well done. :-D There is a hell of a lot inside those beasts, i had to repair a similar beast for a friend, yes i have a frend ha ha :-D it had banks of audio power amplifiers on long pcbs, but you had to strip the unit down to the base board, not a fun fix. There was power supply shut down circuits. If one pcb wasn't correct, the shut down circuits jumped in. So many pcbs and it could be any one. One of the amplifier channels was blown up. Then came the odd parts that were difficult to find. I decided not to touch one of those again lol.
That was a while ago. I don't remember the information you're asking about. You'll have to find the problem area and start testing all the components around that area. Sorry.
So, you're saying you want to see the long process of troubleshooting and unsoldering old parts and soldering new parts in? That would make the video hours long! ??? Please let me know exactly what you're expecting. Thanks for the input.
@@ElectronicsEditor yes like about a hour long like the format of xraytonyb, mr carlson's lab, trevor's bench. I do not like to watch 20 minutes of video without no useful content ... sorry
I like that it as least has some kind of self-diagnostics - I was unlucky having two Onkyo's with the infamous Texas Instrument DTS chip. No error msg, just no sound and no speaker-relay click. The first one was fixed in extended warranty, the other one (TX-NR808) still works (never failed).
Thanks for the video.
Thank you fixing my onkyo
My pleasure. Thank you for the business.
You did an excellent repair :-D well done. :-D
There is a hell of a lot inside those beasts, i had to repair a similar beast for a friend, yes i have a frend ha ha :-D
it had banks of audio power amplifiers on long pcbs, but you had to strip the unit down to the base board, not a fun fix.
There was power supply shut down circuits.
If one pcb wasn't correct, the shut down circuits jumped in.
So many pcbs and it could be any one.
One of the amplifier channels was blown up.
Then came the odd parts that were difficult to find.
I decided not to touch one of those again lol.
Yeah, that sounds like it was a pain. You got it to work again so that's what counts. Great job.
Hello Dear Technician ,, can you please tell me the number of transistors and diode and where you bought, ,, will be your greatness
That was a while ago. I don't remember the information you're asking about. You'll have to find the problem area and start testing all the components around that area. Sorry.
Are those 8 ohm speakers?
The small Realistic speakers I used on the table. Yes, they are 8 Ohm.
what is it with you guys not showing the repairs you do and then wonder why you dont have that many subscribers this is a thumb down video
So, you're saying you want to see the long process of troubleshooting and unsoldering old parts and soldering new parts in? That would make the video hours long! ??? Please let me know exactly what you're expecting. Thanks for the input.
@@ElectronicsEditor yes like about a hour long like the format of xraytonyb, mr carlson's lab, trevor's bench. I do not like to watch 20 minutes of video without no useful content ... sorry