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Neumann KH80DSP Teardown

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A friend of mine decided to look at the inside of the KH80DSP because he found the Neumanns run hotter than his JBL LSR305P MkII. Seems like there hasn't been any teardown picture of the KH80DSP on the internet. My friend kindly allowed me to share these disassembly pictures on this forum, so there they are!

Neumann KH80DSP Teardown 1.jpg
Neumann KH80DSP Teardown 2.jpg
Neumann KH80DSP Teardown 3.jpg
Neumann KH80DSP Teardown 4.jpg
 

pozz

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STM32F207
CS42526

Any images of the chip amps they're using?

Huge motor on that little woofer.
 
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Χ Ξ Σ

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Any images of the chip amps they're using?

Huge motor on that little woofer.
"Nope. The amp chip is covered by a heatsink, and the screws holding the heatsink to the board are glued down. Not sure if I can take that apart without breaking anything."

Says the man.
 

pozz

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I'm that friend who did the teardown. The chip amps' heatsinks have their screws glued down against the board. I'm not sure if I could take them off without breaking the whole thing so I left it as is.
Thanks for going as far as you did:)
 

Mario Sanchez

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I could try using a hot air gun or something similar to melt the glue at a later time. It would prove to be a risky endeavour though.
 

Mario Sanchez

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Thanks for going as far as you did:)
I plan to do another disassembly to clean up the curious soot-like substance inside the speaker cabinet (these are pretty new - been in my hands for less than a month, maybe they slept too long in the warehouse?), I'll use that chance to see if I could investigate a little deeper into the speaker itself.
 

restorer-john

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My goodness.

They are using one of the absolute worst tier of capacitors in the world for catastrophic failure. CapXon. I can see 11 of them on the one board.

All to save a few cents. Neuman are taking their customers for fools. Shame.
 
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Mario Sanchez

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While I try to clean up the cabinet, a few more images:
DownsizedImage.jpg
The cabinet's rear portion comes off easily after unscrewing the two Torx 20 (ish) screws at the bottom rear edge of the cabinet and giving the upper edge of the rear portion a push. There are three plastic extrusions on each side that hook onto cutouts on the cabinet wall. The perimeter of the rear shell is lined with rubber. presumably to improve the seal between the rear shell and the rest of the cabinet. You can also see the glued-down screw holding the heat sink on the opposite side of PCB in place.
DownsizedImage2.jpg

Disconnect the larger 4-pin which goes to the driver as well as the smaller 3-pin which goes to the LED, and the rear portion detaches from the rest of the speaker.
DownsizedImage3.jpg

There is a big fat foam chunk of sorts behind the tweeter driver which also helps the cables stay in place. The cabinet is, of course, made of PC plastic but they have a nice thickness to them and are fairly rigid. There is a strut in the middle of the speaker presumably to reinforce its structure. There are only two types of screws in the kh80: One is a Torx T20(ish) M4 screw that holds the drivers, the port, the strut in the middle of the cabinet, and the rear shell of the speaker in place. The other is a Torx T10(ish) M3 screw which is used to affix PCBs to the speaker.
DownsizedImage4.jpg

The port tube is of a curious design - There is a small hole in the middle of it blocked by the same material which stuffs the upper part of the cabinet! I'll leave it to someone savvier in these things to explain this.
 

pozz

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They are using one of the absolute worst tier of capacitors in the world for catastrophic failure. CapXon. I can see 11 of them on the one board.
Wasn't that reputation earned 10+ years ago? A lot water under the bridge since then.
 

restorer-john

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Wasn't that reputation earned 10+ years ago? A lot water under the bridge since then.

Nearly 20 years ago they earned that reputation. And a lot of electrolyte vented under that same bridge since.

Just the other day it was 2018 CapXons I pulled out of a dead rackmount gigabit switch onboard SMPS at our call centre. 3 years old.

There's just no reasonable excuse for using sh#t capacitors.
 

pozz

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Nearly 20 years ago they earned that reputation. And a lot of electrolyte vented under that same bridge since.

Just the other day it was 2018 CapXons I pulled out of a dead rackmount gigabit switch onboard SMPS at our call centre. 3 years old.

There's just no reasonable excuse for using sh#t capacitors.
Component science review? We need some of that and some stats.
 

restorer-john

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We need some of that and some stats.

I used to keep dead capacitors in a parts bin, but decided the chemicals seeping out were not a good thing to be breathing. Now I throw them away the same day.
Vented electros smell like fish. Eeww.
 

Ron Texas

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My goodness.

They are using one of the absolute worst tier of capacitors in the world for catastrophic failure. CapXon. I can see 11 of them on the one board.

All to save a few cents. Neuman are taking their customers for fools. Shame.

This is the soft underbelly of active speakers. How well are the electronics built?
 

Mario Sanchez

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I managed to remove the heatsink. Amp chip is a lonely TAS5613A. This is a stereo chip from Texas Instruments. My uneducated guess is that it is used in a similar fasion to the STA350BW on JBL305p MkII with one channel hooked up to bass and the other linked to the tweeter.
IMG_20210611_110021.jpg
 

Mario Sanchez

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My goodness.

They are using one of the absolute worst tier of capacitors in the world for catastrophic failure. CapXon. I can see 11 of them on the one board.

All to save a few cents. Neuman are taking their customers for fools. Shame.

There are also a couple "JWCO" capacitors on the board (The green capacitor with a yellowish trim rather than orangeish, as well as one big capacitor on the driver side of PCB).
DownsizedImage5.jpg
DownsizedImage6jpg.jpg

Any opinions on these?
 

restorer-john

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There are also a couple "JWCO" capacitors on the board (The green capacitor with a yellowish trim rather than orangeish, as well as one big capacitor on the driver side of PCB).

That's a new one to me. Apparently Jiaweicheng Electronic Co.

http://www.jiaweicheng.com/en/about.html

what's a really funny coincidence however is this company: http://www.jwco.com/. They provide blowout response services! :)

Guess we'll find out in time whether to add them to the badcaps list or not. But Neumann using cheap capacitors is clearly not a good look.

I wouldn't buy anything with crap capacitors in it. Don't care what it is, it doesn't come into my house.
 
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