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receiver problem
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<blockquote data-quote="joetama" data-source="post: 1877197" data-attributes="member: 564641"><p>It sounds like it is just simply broken...</p><p></p><p>There could be too many different things wrong to list. But here are some of the 'top' ones I can think of. Power supply, amp driver circuitry, the brain or controller circuits are fried.</p><p></p><p>BTW, you aren't going to be able to take it apart and look and see which part is broke. It's probably a diode that's passing both ways when cold or a resistor that's jumping resistance or most likely a transistor that isn't stable anymore.</p><p></p><p>It's what I call a ghost problem, and finding it and fixing it is about as hard as catching a ghost....</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="joetama, post: 1877197, member: 564641"] It sounds like it is just simply broken... There could be too many different things wrong to list. But here are some of the 'top' ones I can think of. Power supply, amp driver circuitry, the brain or controller circuits are fried. BTW, you aren't going to be able to take it apart and look and see which part is broke. It's probably a diode that's passing both ways when cold or a resistor that's jumping resistance or most likely a transistor that isn't stable anymore. It's what I call a ghost problem, and finding it and fixing it is about as hard as catching a ghost.... [/QUOTE]
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