I have a 5A and cannot conceive of you blowing a speaker..they are very rugged. The amp on the Vandersteen 5A only operates the woofer, and actually, it is pretty difficult to hear if that amp isn't working. The first thing to do is to change the speaker wires from the speaker that plays well to the one that doesn't. If the good sound returns to the "bad" speaker, change the input high pass filters to determine if the sound is again wrong with the other high pass filter in the line. Last, you can switch the internal crossover. I would call Richard at Vandersteen for help at that point.
Think I blew a driver on my Vandersteens 5A
Well, just noticed that my right channel is clearly not as loud as my left. I finally bought the analog Radio Shack sound level db meter. I really should have had one all along. It seems to be an indispensable tool. BTW, I have separate left/right gain adjustment on my preamp. So, after doing the measurement w/ the meter, I am 20db + higher in the left channel. 62db vs.82 db at below average listening levels.
Then, I went ahead and unplugged both sub amps, to eliminate the variable of it being a blown Vandy sub amp. Still, no changes w/ the meter. Then, wanted to eliminate the TT,cartridge... Played a CD, still, no changes. Had to go to work, so my troubleshooting has come to and end till later tonight. Next, I think I will run my CDP direct, to see if it may be the preamp. I would think after that, reverse the speaker wires, which of course would indicate a blown driver if the imbalance does not switch channels. I am just thinking that a 20+db difference will likely be a blown tweeter or midrange driver. It seems to be a alot to think it could be a tube in the amp or preamp. BTW, output tubes in amp bias fine.
Then, I went ahead and unplugged both sub amps, to eliminate the variable of it being a blown Vandy sub amp. Still, no changes w/ the meter. Then, wanted to eliminate the TT,cartridge... Played a CD, still, no changes. Had to go to work, so my troubleshooting has come to and end till later tonight. Next, I think I will run my CDP direct, to see if it may be the preamp. I would think after that, reverse the speaker wires, which of course would indicate a blown driver if the imbalance does not switch channels. I am just thinking that a 20+db difference will likely be a blown tweeter or midrange driver. It seems to be a alot to think it could be a tube in the amp or preamp. BTW, output tubes in amp bias fine.
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