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Well Russ, the way I read the problem description was that Joel repeatedly ran that model, and every time it behaved the same way. Sounds ok first, then 40 second later it starts the strange noise.If something was to blow (amp or speaker), after the first time the sound would always be distorted. Or am misinterpreting things?
. . .Not exactly sure which part of the equation fixed the problem in this particular case, but I suspect the larger speaker handled the sound file I was using better. I think some files are more load on speakers and components than others, even with lowered volume. The reason I think this is possible is because I had a prior sound file loaded in this loco that had no problems.
From electrical standpoint, that makes no sense to me (especially "even with lower volume"), but if that's what works for you who am I do dispute it.And still, the description of Joel's problem does not fit that scenario. Repeatedly, the model starts of with clear sound, and the buzzing sound starts after a delay. I don't believe that could be caused by a damaged speaker. The problem is likely on the decoder. In either case, this is a factory installed DCC sound system, so if it is returned for service, they will replace whatever components are required.
... if the speaker impedance is within specs for the amplifier, then the amplifier chip is designed to handle even the loudest and most distorted signal it outputs to the speaker. On the other hand, if the speaker was underrated with wattage (handle lower wattage than the amp can supply) then the speaker can "blow"....
So, I guess what I was trying to articulate was, if the decoder is (over?)driving a speaker that is only rated at, say, 500mW, could this first manifest as some sort of distortion before something outright fails?
And, if so, could this distortion begin after a minute or so of running?