b wrote:
On 27 mayo, 01:55, "Fred Mann" wrote:
Hello,
I have speakers all over my house, wired to two seperate receivers . One
speaker is wired to both receivers. This has not caused a problem for years.
I usually remember to turn one receiver off before turning the other one on.
I hate to sound wise after the event, but that was a disaster just
waiting to happen.
you will need to troubleshoot the output stages of the amp. Good luck
- many amps drive even experienced techs to tears!
try eserviceinfo.com for schematics etc. And if you fix it, then make
the next thing you do adding a switch box of some kind into this
harebrained speaker circuit !
-B-
A lot of units have a processor reset sequence you need to go through
when it shuts down like that due to some over load..
Like holding in a couple buttons when you power it up and so on..
AS far as the other receiver generating smoke/smell, I'm sure that
doesn't share the same kind of protection as I just detailed out.
--
"I'm never wrong, once i thought i was, but was mistaken"
Real Programmers Do things like this.
http://webpages.charter.net/jamie_5