My youngest has a pair of AKG k240 MkII headphones, and he came to me and said the sound started to go funny. Sure enough, when I tried them, part of the audio sounds muffled/distorted like it's underwater. There's no obvious signs of damage to the headphones so I got another cable. Same problem. I sent that back and bought a different cable - problem persists. If I pull the plug out 2 to 3 mm it sounds fine, but it's literally sitting so loose in the jack that the weight of the cable alone can pull it free. The original cable is the same. I'm confused - any ideas?
I don't have those, but my thoughts are; - Dry solder joint somewhere in the headphones, probably around the jack area. - Buggered jack
Can't be a buggered jack - this happens on whatever 3.5mm jack I plug it into, regardless of what cable I use. Bear in mind it sound fine when I pull it out a couple of mm. That's why I'm confused
OK. Are the headphones 4 prong? is the socket 4 prong? It will likely be a combination of the two if one is 3 pin. I have had that issue with modern headphones in the past, and sockets etc.
If the cans are 3 pole try this dude. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/3-5mm-3-...le-3-5mm-Plug-All-Metal-Adapter-/382274545765
You mean four pole vs three pole 3.5mm jack plug? It's a three pole cable, but they've been working fine on the same PC since last August
Deox what though? The cables are new - it happens on whichever device I plug them into and, if it was a problem at the headphone end (which is clean), why would backing out the 3.5mm jack a couple of mm fix the audio? See what I mean about confusing? It doesn't make sense.
I'd be wrist deep in screwdrivers and teardown instructions at this point, but that's just the kind of weirdo I am.
I can see the three pin connector clearly - the pins and the contact plate are bright and clean. Again though, if that was the problem, how/why would this be affected/rectified by backing out the jack at the other end of the cable? I'm at a loss to grasp the possible causes of this.
I have had this issue before. The pins on the male end pretty much can't be damaged ever. However, the pins inside can. There is one way I can think of to determine if the socket is damaged. You know how you said if you pull it out a bit etc? well do that and then run a proper stereo test (where it tests left and right speakers). If it is not running MONO through a short (which is usually what happens when you pull out like that (*sniggers* ) then it is highly likely the socket. If it still runs in stereo like that? it's probably still the socket. I have read through this three times and just so I am not being a total idiot have you tried the headphones on something else?
Like I said, the pins in the socket on the headphones are clean and straight - there is no obvious issue with that socket. the OTHER end of the cable (the 3.5mm audio plug) is the one I have to back out of the port a few mil to get decent audio. It is in stereo. I have been through three headphone cables and the problem persists. I have tried the headphones on my son's PC onboard audio, and with a USB sound card. I've also tried them on my PC, onboard and with a different USB soundcard. Nothing about this makes sense. I've been through the usual processes of eliminating possible causes - three cables and four different audio sources. I'd normally be pointing at the headphones as damaged/faulty but when I can get seemingly perfect audio by manipulating the opposite end of the cable, any cable, it throws doubt on why the headphones are the source of the fault. I was wondering if it was an impedance issue, but how that would manifest and why it would suddenly appear is beyond me.
Hum. I still suspect the jack on the headphones, sounds like something is misaligned/iffy if twiddling the other end 'fixes' the problem.
Probably the socket based on my limited experience. I have exactly the same problem with the socket on the back of my TV. Like you I went through a few different cables, all with the same result.