Introducción
Las tomas de auriculares con frecuencia se desgastan por su uso normal. En lugar de comprar un nuevo par de auriculares, que a veces puede tener un costo considerable, reemplazar el conector suele ser una opción más barata.
Se requiere el uso de un soldador para completar esta reparación. Dado que los cables utilizados en los auriculares son a menudo muy pequeños, esta reparación solo se recomienda para personas con una cantidad decente de experiencia en soldadura.
Deben tomarse precauciones adicionales mientras usa el soldador, están extremadamente calientes y trabajará en espacios muy pequeños. Se recomienda encarecidamente el uso de la herramienta llamada tercera mano.
Qué necesitas
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Corta el cable del auricular cerca del enchufe del auricular viejo. Deja parte del cable unido al enchufe.
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Enciende el polímetro y ponlo para medir resistencia.
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Elige un cable y toca con una de las puntas del polímetro la punta con la soldadura.
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Toca con la otra punta del polímetro cada una de los segmentos del enchufe del auricular hasta que el polímetro indique que el cable está conectado.
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Repite el proceso con cada cable.
Alternative repair suggestion — use a 4 pole headset cable, cut off the jack and solder the wires to the headphone’s cable, using solder and heatshrink tubing. This results in a stronger connection and it’s a lot easier to solder the wires to each other than to the tiny contacts on the plug.
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Ahora has completado el proceso de reemplazo. Conéctalo a una fuente de audio y reproduce música para probar tu trabajo.
Ahora has completado el proceso de reemplazo. Conéctalo a una fuente de audio y reproduce música para probar tu trabajo.
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13 comentarios
This is a plug replacement, not a jack replacement.
This is a jack replacement.
can you please tell me which color wire and where to solder !
Wire colors are not standardized. They even differ among models of the same manufacturer. The only way is to test against the plug that is being replaced. Hopefully most wires still connect to the plug contacts, so a process of elimination can be used. Typical colors are red, blue, green and no color. Ground is usually no color, and sometimes there are 2 grounds (e.g. for ‘zipper’ style wires). The contacts for most phones are as follows (from tip to outside barrel): Right, Left, Ground, Mic. My Samsung S3 cord was very strange: red, green, no color and 2 black wires. One black was Ground, the other was MIC. Soldering requires a magnifier and a fine tipped iron.
No pinout, seriously?
This is rated difficult, I'm trying to find a replacement plug that uses screws vs. soldering. There's a YouTube video on it, but screw plugs are almost impossible to find. I also don't have a multimeter. Another option is to have a repair shop do it - $20 was quoted (fixed or your money back.) …but that is not in the spirit of iFixit.
Im using the original jack after i cut off plastic insulation can u tell me which wires go to which solder points on the jack.
This is a plug replacement, not a jack replacement. The “jack” is the “female” connector in your device. The “male” connector is a “plug”. Seriously get your basic terminology straight, even the part list calls for a “plug”. I have been looking for a jack replacement how to, but every result I get is for plug replacements calling the plugs jacks. Jack & plug are not interchangeable terms.
This guide does not even explain which cable to solder where? There are four wires. Where does it go? How can this even be a guide if it is not even clear? Should this not be removed until it is properly curated?
davvero molto utile e molto apprezzato il lavoro del traduttore Simone
Grazie Mattia, qualora volessi contribuire sentiti pure libero di apportare miglioramenti al testo
Simone -
I need to know the thing that you plug it in to what that's called my head phones are fine it the whole on the phone part is not working