Stock equalizer button October 27, 2004, 07:36:08 PM I don't remember where it was that I read which solder points to join to force the EQ to stay on all the time, but I figure someone here must know. I grew tired of it not working and didn't like having something wedged under the power button to keep it on. So which 2 of the 3 points on the pcb need to be soldered to keep the thing on?Thanks Quote Selected
Re: Stock equalizer button Reply #1 – October 27, 2004, 08:23:17 PM make that 5 solder points as it looks like it directs to a couple capacitors also when pushed in Quote Selected
Re: Stock equalizer button Reply #2 – October 27, 2004, 09:25:01 PM well I soldered onto the small pcb inside the power button and it worked...until I assembled the eq again. Looks like I'll HAVE to solder the back of the large pcb instead as this didn't work well enough. So where's that info on which places to solder? :p Quote Selected
Re: Stock equalizer button Reply #3 – October 28, 2004, 05:53:47 AM well I THINK its pins 1-2, 3-4, and 7-8, leaving 5 and 6 untouched. I'm unsure though. It appears to work but the led bar(volume bar) on the left is a lot less sensitive than I remember it being. Now I have to set the volume turned up halfway or more for the led bar to peak where before it was around 1/4-1/3. I just hope things won't die from lack or ground or some other problem Quote Selected
Re: Stock equalizer button Reply #4 – November 14, 2004, 08:17:18 PM I have the same annoying issue, which pins did you connect directly behind the switch, or some other ones? Quote Selected
Re: Stock equalizer button Reply #5 – November 14, 2004, 08:59:20 PM there's 8 solder points in total behind the switch, and I'm unsure if they're all visible from the back of the pcb - this was a couple weeks ago. I counted the pin closest to the edge of the pcb as pin 8, pin 1 being closer to the middle. Connecting pins 1-2, 3-4, and 7-8 control the right channel, rear channel, and the led's, probably not in that order. I think connecting 5-6 will act as passthrough but I'm not sure.if you follow the traces on the pcb, you should be able to solder 3 short wires to the back and it'll function just fine.and because I forgot to take a picture of the thing before I put it back together, here's a paint drawing (I bet nothing's to scale or correctly shaped) Quote Selected