Introducción
Sustituye la batería de tu JBL Extreme sin arriesgarte a cometer errores, ¡y sigue disfrutando de la mejor música con tu altavoz!
Qué necesitas
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Localiza las costuras al lado de los 'pies' en la parte inferior del dispositivo.
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Utiliza la espátula metálica para hacer palanca suavemente y levantar el borde de la costura. La cubierta se mantiene en su lugar con broches de plástico que harán un ruido al desengancharse. Comieza con la mitad trasera, esto expondrá DOS tornillos que necesitan ser removidos antes de levantar la mitad delantera.
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Para la primera parte de la funda: Tira suavemente hacia atrás de los bordes de la funda girando a lo largo de la bisagra opuesta a la costura de apertura ilustrada en la segunda foto. Unos broches de plástico mantienen la funda en su sitio.
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Para la segunda parte de la carcasa: Tienes que quitar 2 tornillos en la costura. Una vez retirados, la carcasa saldrá completamente sin forzar.
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Desatornilla los seis tornillos de cabeza Phillips de 9,75 mm que sujetan el radiador de graves.
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Localiza los tres tornillos de cabeza Phillips de 9.7 mm en el interior del compartimento protegido con cremallera, y desatorníllalos.
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Separa el panel con la cremallera del altavoz.
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Para montar tu dispositivo de nuevo, sigue estas instrucciones en orden inverso.
Para montar tu dispositivo de nuevo, sigue estas instrucciones en orden inverso.
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43 comentarios
I couldn't find the battery specification anywhere in the Internet, so I removed it, easily following the well presented instructions above. The battery has two cells. The label on each cell says Greatpower, model no. GSP0931134, 7.4 volts, 5000 mah, 37Wh, made in China. Overall dimensions are 145mm x 32mm x 19mm (145mm includes a small electronic board where cables from the board connect to the plug.) After an Amazon and Google search, I'm no closer to a replacement. At least the reassembled Xtreme works without a battery with external power. JBL is of no help, either. I'll be looking model airplane stores, as they have every LiPo battery imaginable. In summary, the JBL Xtreme is a short lived unsupported product.
This is kinda late but were there any extra steps for running the speaker without a battery? Since the speaker is not working anymore at all, even with power connected, I would be happy to run it like this but am not sure whether it is really enough to just remove the battery.
So what this means is you have two lithium cells in parallel and those two are in series with another set of two, they are 3.7V nominal each. 2500mAh and 9.25Wh each.
I don't think this is a lipo battery (comes in all shapes and sizes, literally every dimension you could think of). The dimensions given are far too similar to 4 lithium ion 18650 (18x65mm) cells. Probably have +8 8 8- thats two cells with one lying on top of the other and nickel strip is going across the + of both cells and across the - of both cells. The next set of cells will be right behind it so it will look like this
+8 8 8- +8 8 8-
Imagine each o of the 8 is a cell, it was the easiest way to represent cells stacked on top of each other horizontally. The second set of cells are connected together with nickel strip exactly like the first set, putting them in parallel too. Pushing them together like in my "drawing" is what puts them in series (positive to negative). The single white wire on the 5 wire connector is the balance wire that