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That terrible thing will have to come one day – when your headphones finally show up and fail. Luckily, you don’t have to immediately buy a new pair of headphones! You can fix it yourself, just stop by to buy something at the electronics store. The parts that you need to fix will be very small, so they run the risk of damage. But if your headphones are already broken, there’s not much to lose when you want to fix them.
Steps
Find the problem
- If the headphone cable cannot be pulled out, go to the next step, Use a multimeter .
- Set the meter to conductive test mode ) ) ) or a similar symbol.
- Insert the black jack into the hole marked COM.
- Insert the red jack into the hole marked Ω, mA, or ) ) ) .
- Make an incision near the jack and one near the headphone speaker.
- Copper wire is usually coated with a colorless protective coating. Use a knife to gently scrape it off. [1] X Research Source
- Hold the black jack of the power meter and touch the copper wire at one end of the headphone wire, the red jack on the other end. If the watch beeps, the problem is in the headphone jack or in the speaker.
- If it doesn’t chirp, make a slit in the center of the string and test each half of the rope.
- Making another cut in half of the wire does not cause the meter to sound. Continue doing this until the broken wire is determined to be within a few centimeters.
- Continue with the step Repair the power cable . Skip the recheck step.
Repair power cable
- Once you’ve found the break, mark it with a piece of electrical tape.
- If you found the break with the power meter, skip this step.
- If the wire looks like two small wires stuck together, each wire will contain in the core an insulated wire (signal wire) and a bare wire (ground wire).
- Apple headphones and some other types of headphones with a power cord will have 2 wires in the insulated core (left and right signals) and one bare wire is the ground wire.
- If only one wire is broken, you’ll probably want to re-solder it without cutting or wiring. [4] X Research Source Doing so will be faster, but the weld will be less solid.
- If you have to cut the rope several times to find the break, attach a piece of pipe to each cut.
- With braiding, keep the two pieces of string you want to connect parallel to each other, then twist them to create a splice. This is quick and easy to do, but the splice will seem cumbersome.
- With a twisted inward connection, hold the wire so that the small copper wires of the two wires are mixed from one end to the other. Twist the wires in opposite directions, this will be more difficult but the joint will be more compact and easy to hide.
- Unsheathed bare wires are usually covered with a protective coating, scrape it off with sandpaper or burn it with a soldering iron before soldering. Avoid inhaling fumes. [6] X Research Sources
- Once cooled, wrap the two pairs of connections with tape to ensure that the open ends are separated from the ground wire.
- The piece of pipe should shrink to ¼ of its original size, fitting snugly to protect and make the cord that has just been joined more durable.
Fix broken jack
- When opening the jack, look at the wires. If it looks healthy and hasn’t been broken, just cut it off. Maybe the problem lies in the wire near the jack.
- The double wire has an extra bare wire, but the other wires inside are the same as the single wire.
- The main part of the jack should have two protruding pins at the top. If there is only one pin, the jack is mono, not stereo.
- The bare wire will connect to the big leg, which is the longest piece of iron. If the headset does not have a bare wire, the connector has a sheath painted in two mutually plaid colors.
- The remaining two insulated wires will be connected to the other two pins (two short pins with rings on top). Since there is no convention for wire color, If you connect the wrong wires, the left and right speaker sound will be mixed together. Otherwise, the headset will work normally.
Repair earphone speakers
- Find the location of the screw on the headset. You will probably need a size 0 4-sided screwdriver to open them.
- Gently pry off the cover. When it falls off, find the screws inside and unscrew it.
- Insert a file or other thin tool into the gap between the two earcups and pry them open. This may damage some headphones, so it’s better to find a how-to guide first.
- The headset cover can be removed, but you may have to find a new rubber pad. [11] X Research Source Usually the problem lies with the power cord attached to the earpiece speaker.
- If more than one wire is broken, you may need to read the instructions to see which wire attaches to where.
- Make sure the wires do not touch each other.
- Cut off the rubber lining around the speaker cover with a sharp knife.
- Remove the old cone speaker inside.
- Place the new speaker in place. Be careful not to touch the diaphragm.
- If you’re not sure, put a little glue around its edges.
Advice
- Practice on cheap headphones first, if you have one available.
- Try not to keep the torch on the weld joint for too long, it may melt the surrounding plastic or damage the joint.
- If the cover around the earphone cap has come off, you can use silicone rubber as a mold to replace it. [13] X Research Source
Warning
- Be careful not to burn yourself; The soldering iron gets very hot when in use.
Things you need
- Welder
- Soldering tin
- Wire stripping pliers
- Paper cutter or scissors
- Shrink plastic tube (used when fixing wires or jacks)
- New jack (used when repairing jacks)
- Multimeter power meter (use when you have not found the fault anywhere).
This article is co-authored by a team of editors and trained researchers who confirm the accuracy and completeness of the article.
The wikiHow Content Management team carefully monitors the work of editors to ensure that every article is up to a high standard of quality.
There are 8 references cited in this article that you can see at the bottom of the page.
This article has been viewed 233,662 times.
That terrible thing will have to come one day – when your headphones finally show up and fail. Luckily, you don’t have to immediately buy a new pair of headphones! You can fix it yourself, just stop by to buy something at the electronics store. The parts that you need to fix will be very small, so they run the risk of damage. But if your headphones are already broken, there’s not much to lose when you want to fix them.
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