
TROUBLESHOOTING
Symptom | Possible Cause | Remedy | |
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The PowerCenter is | The PowerCenter is not turned On. | • | Turn the PowerCenter switch on. |
not receiving power. |
| • | Make sure the PowerCenter’s AC power plug is plugged into a properly grounded |
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| 120 volts (nominal) wall outlet. |
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| • | In some households, a wall switch may need to be thrown to make the wall plug |
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| active. Try turning on the light switches located near the wall unit. |
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| Too many devices are connected, causing an overload, | • | Press the PowerCenter Thermal Circuit Breaker button in to reset. Please allow |
| tripping the Thermal Circuit Breaker. |
| 10 minutes before attempting to reset. If you reset too soon, the breaker will |
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| prematurely sense power overload and not allow unit to operate. |
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| • | If the Circuit Breaker continues to trip, try moving one or more components |
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| to another PowerCenter. You may be drawing too much current through |
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| one PowerCenter. |
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Component is | The PowerCenter is plugged into a Switched outlet, but | • | Turn the component power On. |
not receiving power. | power on the component is not On. In some instances, a |
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| component plugged into a switched outlet won’t receive |
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| power when the PowerCenter is turned On unless |
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| the component power switch is also switched On. |
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Speakers emit | The PowerCenter is sharing AC power with equipment | • | Connect your PowerCenter to a dedicated outlet. |
a humming or | that is not properly grounded. | • | Try unplugging different components from the PowerCenter one at a time to see if the noise |
buzzing noise. |
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| stops. If a component is discovered to be improperly grounded, attach a copper wire from | |
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| the component’s chassis to the nearest available grounding point. |
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