What I have been beating my head around was that once it stops charging, it stops also working with it just being wired. So literally today I discovered and therefore so surprised to see an update to this thread after several years of silence on the very exact date is that in order for the device to work off a USB cable (I believe you do not need the mobility that often anyway and if you did, you could just bring a battery pack) was to disconnect the faulty battery / circuit altogether because that is what drains the USB power supply and does not let the device to work. My thingy EE1736 had its battery charging circuit mounted on the actual battery so easy to remove.
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What I have been beating my head around was that once it stops charging, it stops also working with it just being wired. So literally today I discovered and therefore so surprised to see an update to this thread after several years of silence on the very exact date is that in order for the device to work off a USB cable (I believe you do not need the mobility that often anyway and if you did, you could just bring a battery pack) was to disconnect the faulty battery / circuit altogether because that is what drains the USB power supply and does not let the device to work. My thingy EE1736 had its battery charging circuit mounted on the actual battery so easy to remove with an elegant clip of scissors.
[image|2878455]
Extract the hairy beast out of your device to happily live ever after.
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I now use the board from the speaker to power my computer speakers after my amplifier died and appear to be a decent choice.
What I have been beating my head around was that once it stops charging, it stops also working with it just being wired. So literally today I discovered and therefore so surprised to see an update to this thread after several years of silence on the very exact date is that in order for the device to work off a USB cable (I believe you do not need the mobility that often anyway and if you did, you could just bring a battery pack) was to disconnect the faulty battery / circuit altogether because that is what drains the USB power supply and does not let the device to work. My thingy EE1736 had its battery charging circuit mounted on the actual batter so easy to remove.
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What I have been beating my head around was that once it stops charging, it stops also working with it just being wired. So literally today I discovered and therefore so surprised to see an update to this thread after several years of silence on the very exact date is that in order for the device to work off a USB cable (I believe you do not need the mobility that often anyway and if you did, you could just bring a battery pack) was to disconnect the faulty battery / circuit altogether because that is what drains the USB power supply and does not let the device to work. My thingy EE1736 had its battery charging circuit mounted on the actual battery so easy to remove.
[image|2878455]
Extract the hairy beast out of your device to happily live ever after.
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+
+
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I now use the board from the speaker to power my computer speakers after my amplifier died and appear to be a decent choice.
What I have been beating my head around was that once it stops charging, it stops also working with it just being wired. So literally today I discovered and therefore so surprised to see an update to this thread after several years of silence on the very exact date is that in order for the device to work off a USB cable (I believe you do not need the mobility that often anyway and if you did, you could just bring a battery pack) was to disconnect the faulty battery / circuit altogether because that is what drains the USB power supply and does not let the device to work. My thingy EE1736 had its battery charging circuit mounted on the actual batter so easy to remove.
[image|2878455]
Extract the hairy beast out of your device to happily live ever after.