The Beomaster 8000 is on the bench again. After about two weeks of happy service in the living room after 'completing' my restoration, out of a sudden it went into standby. Turned it on again...half an hour later: Standby! Not great. Tried it a few more times....Standby! And again!. I swapped it out with Beomaster 8000-2 (it is like with classic cars...one best has two if one is supposed to run at all times...;-), and opened it up. It turned out that the standby pin (#14 on IC4 - the microprocessor responsible for the radio, volume and startup) occasionally disconnected from the power supply causing the Beomaster to go into standby. This becomes evident by a larger-than-0V voltage (~3.5-4V) at pin 7 on P76 on the microprocessor board (#9). I traced the problem to a bad via on the board. Resoldering the via between P76-7 and pin 14 of the processor solved the problem. Here is a picture:
I resoldered all three vias above the microprocessor (to the right of the C97 label) for good measure. This is done best by simply putting a dab of flux paste on each via, and briefly reheating them with the soldering iron (340C). Use the usual precautions against ESD if you do this in a dry-air environment...the microprocessors are hard to find...;-).
Beolover provides professional Bang&Olufsen maintenance and restoration services. We give one year warranty on parts and labor. All parts featured on the blog are also available to other enthusiasts for their restoration projects. Please, send an email to beolover@gmail.com or use the contact form on the side bar. Enjoy the blog!
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