Hi,
I live in a flat where all the wall plugs (about 10 x double wall plugs) are connected to the same fuse. The heaviest thing connected are a fridge and a washing machine, then i have a printer, a couple of laptops, 5 x LED lights, 2 dehumidifiers (240W, 1.2A) and my beloved Mackie CR5BT Monitor Speakers which I use via bluetooth.
Recently, the fuse started tripping, apparently at random. I have gradually disconnected everything and tried all sorts of different combinations but the tripping happens apparently independently of what is plugged in and in particular at night. Really weird. Anyway, as we have established that none of the appliances are causing the problem and with the wiring being inside the walls /below the floors, my landlord is now replacing all the wiring to the wall plugs.
Anyway, the problem I'd like to post here is regarding my speakers. after a few days of the fuse tripping (about 3 times/day and throughout the night to the point that i just left it off during the night), one day I turned my speakers on and they started making a bass sound which didn't sound very healthy. Nothing was connected to the speakers except from the power. See brief video attached. I turned the speakers on and off a few times, then the sound stopped and speakers seemed to work well. However, after about 30 min of use via bluetooth, they stopped working. Then the fuse tripped again and they did the bass sound again when i turned them back on. I have since unplugged them until my landlord replaces all the wires.
My questions are:
Has anyone seen anything like that and what does it mean? Can I assume that my landlord should be accountable for the broken speakers due to the fault in the circuit (which we still don't know what it is but we assume it's a fault with a wire somewhere). Could the speakers possibly be fixed otherwise?
I am new to this forum and only have a very basic understanding of electronics but this is something I have never heard of and could not find anything similar online either.
Please help!
Thanks in advance,
Stef
I live in a flat where all the wall plugs (about 10 x double wall plugs) are connected to the same fuse. The heaviest thing connected are a fridge and a washing machine, then i have a printer, a couple of laptops, 5 x LED lights, 2 dehumidifiers (240W, 1.2A) and my beloved Mackie CR5BT Monitor Speakers which I use via bluetooth.
Recently, the fuse started tripping, apparently at random. I have gradually disconnected everything and tried all sorts of different combinations but the tripping happens apparently independently of what is plugged in and in particular at night. Really weird. Anyway, as we have established that none of the appliances are causing the problem and with the wiring being inside the walls /below the floors, my landlord is now replacing all the wiring to the wall plugs.
Anyway, the problem I'd like to post here is regarding my speakers. after a few days of the fuse tripping (about 3 times/day and throughout the night to the point that i just left it off during the night), one day I turned my speakers on and they started making a bass sound which didn't sound very healthy. Nothing was connected to the speakers except from the power. See brief video attached. I turned the speakers on and off a few times, then the sound stopped and speakers seemed to work well. However, after about 30 min of use via bluetooth, they stopped working. Then the fuse tripped again and they did the bass sound again when i turned them back on. I have since unplugged them until my landlord replaces all the wires.
My questions are:
Has anyone seen anything like that and what does it mean? Can I assume that my landlord should be accountable for the broken speakers due to the fault in the circuit (which we still don't know what it is but we assume it's a fault with a wire somewhere). Could the speakers possibly be fixed otherwise?
I am new to this forum and only have a very basic understanding of electronics but this is something I have never heard of and could not find anything similar online either.
Please help!
Thanks in advance,
Stef