I always found it funny how people change cables in the HD600/650 to different materials/ different thickness, and priced at more than the headphone itself, when in fact, that outside cable will always contact the drivers voice coil trough that hair-like tiny piece of wire.
Excellent! Had no idea that's how it's fixed. You saved me from getting new headphones AND when I called Sennheiser about the springs they sent them to me at NO CHARGE! Shipped free. Thank you Sennheiser and thank YOU InnerFidelity! Great video, great up close shots. Literally took me 10 minutes to replace...course I had to put a pair of +250 over a pair of +250 glasses to see those hair thin wires but your tutorial was spot on. Thanks for taking the time to share this!
Happy to stumble upon this video. My HD 58x Jubilees decided to lose sound on right side after 6 years of use. Just had to pop off the frame and the driver just fell in my hands. Put the springs back home and we have sound again.
Did he honestly fart at 8:03? I guess he assumed that most of us wouldn't be watching this video with a pair of Sennheisers on and a headphone amp/ DAC.
I like how you kept the slip-ups in. I think if you edited it to be smooth-sailing procedure, people'd be more prone to slipping up, themselves. They'd take for granted, that
Yikes, I was able to disassemble my HD650s, but when I held the spring with my needle nose pliers, it bounced away, never to be found! I can't believe Sennheiser used such a fragile connection to make these. I'm not sure I have it in me to order new springs and try again. Too bad, these were my favorite headphones.
These headphones are goddamn tough i can tell you. must have dropped them more than a 100 times (i"m pretty clumsy). Also tripped allot over the cable which resulted in some high speed collision with the floor and janking the jack out of my audiointerface.
I used this guide to figure out why one side of my Sennheiser HD 58X Jubilee headphones weren't working. Turns out the spring had popped out and was no longer making contact with the two-pronged connectors. Used some tweezers to click it back in, and everything's working now.
I'm working with a disassembled HD700 that sucked a screw into the rear of the driver tonight, your suggestion to suck on the thin plastic of the driver to bring it back to shape saved me, thank you.
thank you SO MUCH, the buzzing sound has been driving me crazy for more than a year and following your tutorial reveal a tiny hair on the driver, carefully removed it and it now works again, you just made my day
I always found it funny how people change cables in the HD600/650 to different materials/ different thickness, and priced at more than the headphone itself, when in fact, that outside cable will always contact the drivers voice coil trough that hair-like tiny piece of wire.
"Woaho! I've just destroyed that one"
Excellent! Had no idea that's how it's fixed. You saved me from getting new headphones AND when I called Sennheiser about the springs they sent them to me at NO CHARGE! Shipped free. Thank you Sennheiser and thank YOU InnerFidelity! Great video, great up close shots. Literally took me 10 minutes to replace...course I had to put a pair of +250 over a pair of +250 glasses to see those hair thin wires but your tutorial was spot on. Thanks for taking the time to share this!
Happy to stumble upon this video. My HD 58x Jubilees decided to lose sound on right side after 6 years of use. Just had to pop off the frame and the driver just fell in my hands. Put the springs back home and we have sound again.
Did he honestly fart at 8:03? I guess he assumed that most of us wouldn't be watching this video with a pair of Sennheisers on and a headphone amp/ DAC.
My heart just STOP when u damage that driver....
I like how you kept the slip-ups in. I think if you edited it to be smooth-sailing procedure, people'd be more prone to slipping up, themselves. They'd take for granted, that
Yikes, I was able to disassemble my HD650s, but when I held the spring with my needle nose pliers, it bounced away, never to be found! I can't believe Sennheiser used such a fragile connection to make these. I'm not sure I have it in me to order new springs and try again. Too bad, these were my favorite headphones.
08:20 I laughed so hard
My cat has crinkled the drivers on my speakers many times and i've noticed no difference. I doubt it really does.
8:03
Category
These headphones are goddamn tough i can tell you. must have dropped them more than a 100 times (i"m pretty clumsy). Also tripped allot over the cable which resulted in some high speed collision with the floor and janking the jack out of my audiointerface.
I used this guide to figure out why one side of my Sennheiser HD 58X Jubilee headphones weren't working. Turns out the spring had popped out and was no longer making contact with the two-pronged connectors. Used some tweezers to click it back in, and everything's working now.
I'm working with a disassembled HD700 that sucked a screw into the rear of the driver tonight, your suggestion to suck on the thin plastic of the driver to bring it back to shape saved me, thank you.
Step 1: disassemble headphones
YES! I was able to fix my HD600's without replacing the spring, just needed to lightly move the over a bit. Thanks for this video!
thank you SO MUCH, the buzzing sound has been driving me crazy for more than a year and following your tutorial reveal a tiny hair on the driver, carefully removed it and it now works again, you just made my day
Absolute saviour, I didn't have to replace my spring, just reseat it. Thank you for this video!
This saved me a lot of time and headache. I got my HD 650s fixed up in just a few minutes. Thanks!