Chapter Four: Troubleshooting

Troubleshooting is how you determine what part of a complex system (like a home theater system) is at fault when the system isn’t working how you think it should. When you troubleshoot a system, you diagnose a problem by examining and eliminating possible causes until there’s only one left. Troubleshooting is easiest when you start with the most obvious, most common, and most likely and work from there.

Diagnosing your own problems can save you time and aggravation—the better you understand how to troubleshoot and adjust your own system, the less time you have to:

spend on the phone with a customer service representative

do without your receiver because it’s “in the shop”

There are some basic steps to good troubleshooting:

 

1. Verify the exact conditions when the problem occurs.

 

This is the most important step in troubleshooting. Whether you fix

 

it yourself or have to describe it to a technician, you are much more

 

likely to really solve the problem if you know the exact circumstances

 

surrounding the problem. For example, if you don’t hear anything

 

through the speakers, it’s useful to know if it only happens when you

 

are listening to CDs. Knowing that eliminates the speakers themselves

 

as part of the problem. The more you know about when a problem

 

occurs, the more likely it is that you or the technician can solve it.

 

2. Check each part of the signal’s path from source (such as a CD

 

player) to speaker.

 

You may also want to test the assumptions you made in step 1: maybe

 

you haven’t listened to your MD recorder in a while— is there no

 

sound from it as well? This step will really help narrow down the

 

possible causes. Test all your connected components and eliminate

 

the ones where the problem doesn’t occur. When you’re done with

Troubleshooting

this step, you’ll probably have found the problem.

 

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