SOURCE: Bose in-ear headphone cord cut
most head phones there two wires. those are the two that you most likly put together. if there is any metel mesh covering the wires. that has to be connected also.
SOURCE: Replacement connector for Sennheiser PX 250 doesn't work...
The bare copper conductor wire is the screening/common earth to the two signal wires of green and red. The important connection is the copper wire which goes to the jack plug earth which is the section furthest from the tip. The other two are the left and right signal connections. If you get these the wrong way round you will just have to swap them over. Check if they are the right way round by using the balance control on your amplifier or whatever. Have you checked that the problem is not with the headphone amplifier within your equipment? Don't rely on OK sound from loudspeakers as the headphones may be fed from separate op-amp output chip. Try another pair of cheap and cheerful headphones to make sure.
SOURCE: Bose Tri-port headphones Model TP-1A plug in appears to have short.
Im looking for a pair that have a broken cord for reuse in a new life. contact me if you are interested in selling them. n_raven99 (at) hotmail.com
SOURCE: Don't get sound fron ONE of PCX 250 earphones. Am
See my tip on replacement of cable and plugs on headphones it help decide what to do.
SOURCE: my bose in ear headphones
You will have to strip back enough wire length on the wires and also on the jack (or a good new and used jack with wires coming out of it) and wrap or solder them together, then wrap them in tape or coat with nail polish, and tape when they dry. Sometimes it just won't work, sometimes it can, just depends. Since the wires are usually multiwired and lacquer-coated, it is tricky and very hard. You have to separate the thin cloth fibers used for strength, and then scrape the lacquer off with an exacto knife, scraping the ends repeatedly. It's a delicate and hard operation. After the lacquer is off, wrap the ends together, or carefully solder if you can. Be careful soldering, since it's easy to burn up the super thin wires with too much heat.
These items are not designed or built to be fixed, or serviced, but sometimes you can get lucky. I used to do it, but it's a **** shoot whether it will really work, is tedious and takes awhile, and then there's no guarantee how long .
Good luck, wish there was better or easier news.
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