Troubleshooting
PROBLEMS | CAUSE | SOLUTIONS | |
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Humming or buzzing noise. | You may have a ground loop | Try using a cheater plug. Do NOT ground | |
| problem. | the grounding tab on the cheater plug! | |
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| That would defeat the purpose of the | |
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| cheater plug for this application. | |
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| There may be a problem with | Disconnect all interconnect cables from | |
| other external equipment. | the | |
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| equipment. If hum goes away when | |
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| interconnects are disconnected, hum is | |
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| coming from the rest of your equipment. | |
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| Add them back one piece at a time. The | |
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| one that causes the system to hum is the | |
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| source of the hum. | |
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No output from the | AC power is not making it to | Check that the power cord is plugged in | |
the | securely at both ends and make sure | ||
not light up). |
| that the power outlet the | |
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| plugged into is functioning properly. | |
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| The amplifier’s fuse is blown. | Unplug the power cord and remove the | |
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| fuse holder with a screwdriver and check | |
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| the fuse (located just above the power | |
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| plug). If the fuse is blown, replace. If the | |
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| fuse blows again, the output transistors | |
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| are probably damaged. At that point, it is | |
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| recommended to email or call technical | |
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| support for authorization to send the | |
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Bass response sounds | The | Place the ‘phase’ switch in its alternate | |
"weak" or "unstable". | speakers are out of phase. | position | |
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Excessive "rumbling" | The ‘crossover’ is set too low. | Adjust the ‘crossover’ to a higher setting | |
sound from |
| i.e. 80Hz or 120Hz. | |
output. |
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The ‘level’ control is set too | Adjust the ‘level’ control to a lower | ||
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| high. | setting. | |
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| The external amplifier’s | Adjust the external amplifiers crossover, | |
| crossover, EQ or tone settings | EQ or tone settings | |
| are not balanced correctly. |
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