INSTALLATION
requirements of all applicable state and local building codes, as well as NEC (National Electrical Code) requirements. Check with your local authorities as needed to ensure that all wiring inside walls is installed in compliance with the proper standards. Failure to do so may present a potential safety hazard. If you have any doubt about your ability to work with electrical and telecommuni- cations wiring, you are advised to hire a professional licensed electrician or custom installer to install the multiroom system.
1.Connect the remote room’s speakers directly to the Surround Back/Multiroom Speaker Outputs. See Figure 37.
Figure 37 – Surround Back/Multiroom Speaker Outputs
If you do not require a full
2.Connect an external amplifier to the Surround Back/Multiroom Preamp Outputs. See Figure 38.
the remote room may turn the multiroom system on or off, select a source input, control the source device connected to that input and adjust the volume in the remote zone.
NOTE: Only analog audio sources are available to the multiroom system.
Step Eleven – Turn On the AVR 247
Two steps are required the first time you turn on the AVR 247.
1.Gently press the Master Power Switch until the word OFF is no longer visible. The Power Indicator above the two power switches should light up in amber, indicating that the AVR is in Standby mode and is ready to be turned on. See Figure 39. Normally, you may leave the Master Power Switch in the ON position, even when the receiver is not being used.
Figure 39 – Power Switches
2.There are several ways in which the AVR 247 may be turned on from Standby mode.
a)Press the Standby/On Switch on the front panel. See Figure 39.
b)Press the Source Select Button on the front panel. See Figure 40.
Figure 38 – Surround Back/Multiroom Preamp Outputs
This method may be used when it is more important to distribute audio to additional rooms than to have a full 7.1-channel system in the main listening area, as it is still necessary to assign the surround back amplifier channels to the remote zone, limiting the main system to 5.1 channels. This method also requires you to provide an additional component, that is, the amplifier. However, this method may be used to increase the number of remote rooms in the system when you are also using the Surround Back/Multiroom Speaker Outputs.
It is recommended that you place the amplifier in the same room as the AVR 247 so that a shorter length of interconnect cable is used with a long run of speaker wire to the remote room, rather than placing the amplifier in the remote room, which necessitates a long run of intercon- nect cable that would then be subject to signal degradation. Depending on the number of channels available in your amplifier, you may distribute the AVR 247’s analog audio signal to a single pair of speakers for two- channel listening, to several pairs of speakers located in several different rooms, or when listening to mono FM radio, to individual speakers placed in different rooms. Use the Tuning Mode Button to select the mono mode for FM radio.
In addition to the audio signal, you will usually wish to connect an IR control device to the AVR 247’s Multiroom IR Input so that listeners in
Figure 40 – Source Select Button
c)Using the remote, press any one of these buttons: AVR, DVD/CD, TAPE/The Bridge, HDMI 1/2, VID1, VID2, VID3, VID4, XM, AM/FM or 6/8CH. See Figure 41.
Figure 41 – AVR and Input Selectors
NOTE: Any time you press one of the Input Selectors on the remote (i.e., DVD/CD, TAPE/The Bridge, HDMI 1/HDMI 2, VID1, VID2, VID3 or VID4), the remote will switch modes so that it will only transmit the codes programmed to operate that device. In order to control the receiver, press the AVR Button to return the remote to AVR mode.
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