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Amp turns off... still
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<blockquote data-quote="metalheadjoe" data-source="post: 8744154" data-attributes="member: 581422"><p>That's not how electronics work. It's great you are trying to help, but you are guessing and making stuff up. Lower impedance results in more current, not more voltage. Regardless, that is downstream of the issue here. The apparent issue is supply voltage. You can draw down supply voltage with excessive current, but you can't draw up supply voltage because the amp feels like it. Covering as many bases as you can implies you don't know how to effectively troubleshoot a problem. You might get lucky and land on the same conclusion, but it's a lot more time-consuming and often more expensive. As they say, "Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every now and then".</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="metalheadjoe, post: 8744154, member: 581422"] That's not how electronics work. It's great you are trying to help, but you are guessing and making stuff up. Lower impedance results in more current, not more voltage. Regardless, that is downstream of the issue here. The apparent issue is supply voltage. You can draw down supply voltage with excessive current, but you can't draw up supply voltage because the amp feels like it. Covering as many bases as you can implies you don't know how to effectively troubleshoot a problem. You might get lucky and land on the same conclusion, but it's a lot more time-consuming and often more expensive. As they say, "Even a blind squirrel finds a nut every now and then". [/QUOTE]
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