Introduzione
Questa guida ti mostrerà come sostituire la batteria nella cassa BlueTooth JBL Xtreme.
Strumenti
Ricambi
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Usa uno spudger in metallo per fare leva delicatamente e sollevare il bordo della fessura. La copertura è tenuta ferma da dei ganci in plastica che faranno uno scoppiettio quando verranno separati. Inizia dalla metà posteriore, scoprendo così DUE viti che vanno svitate prima di rimuovere la metà anteriore.
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Per la prima parte della copertura: tira delicatamente i bordi posteriori della copertura lungo la cerniera dalla parte opposta alla fessura mostrata nella seconda immagine. Dei ganci in plastica tengono ferma la copertura.
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Per la seconda parte della copertura: Ci sono 2 viti da svitare sotto la fessura. Una volta rimosse, la copertura si rimuoverà del tutto senza forzare.
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Trova le tre viti a croce Phillips da 9,7 mm dentro il comparto della cerniera lampo e svitale.
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Solleva il pannello della cerniera dalla cassa.
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Sotto il pannello della cerniera ci sono altre otto viti a croce Phillips da 9,75 mm. Svitale e solleva delicatamente la copertura della batteria.
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" piccole viti fissano questa parte alla copertura. Per semplificare il lavoro in futuro, svitale e rimuovi delicatamente questa parte per liberare la copertura.
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Solleva attentamente la batteria dal dispositivo, facendo scorrere il cavo attraverso il foro nella copertura nel mentre.
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Per rimontare il dispositivo, segui le istruzioni in ordine inverso.
42 commenti
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
this &&^&^$^ jbl costumer support service is charging me $110 for battery replacement, and a $30 service charge, it cost half of the speaker price,
Same here in Hungary.
I’ve got a battery issue (a full charge lasts only about 3-4 hours of playback on mid volume) after a little more than 1 year of usage…
110 US dollars for replacement. Nonsense!
That’s what these instructions are for. You’ll pay 25 EUR for a new battery and maybe 5 .. 10 EUR for some tools and you can fix it yourself and have a speaker that is as good as new!
RTFM -