Poor
Bass
Performance
from
Full
Range
Speakers
•
Make
sure
that
your
preamp
does
not
have
the
bass
(tone
control)
level
turned
down.
•
Many
surround
preamplifiers
have
controls,
which
can
direct
all
the
bass
to
subwoofers,
or
let
your
main
speakers
play
the
full
range.
Make
sure
that
the
preamplifier
has
been
correctly
set.
If
you
are
not
using
a
subwoofer,
set
the
speaker
options
to
“Large”
where
possible.
•
Check
that
the
speaker
wires
have
been
connected
correctly:
Make
sure
that
the
positive
of
each
speaker
connects
to
a
positive
output
of
the
amplifier,
and
the
negative
of
each
speaker
connects
to
the
negative
output.
If
one
speaker
is
wired
incorrectly,
then
it
will
be
“out
of
phase”
with
the
others,
resulting
in
poor
bass
performance.
DOUBLE
CHECK
ALL
THE
SPEAKER
CONNECTIONS!!
Turn
‐
on
and
Turn
‐
off
Thumps
•
Plug
the
ampli
fi
er
into
an
un
‐
switched
AC
outlet,
and
use
the
3.5mm
Trigger
Input
connection
with
a
trigger
between
5
‐
12VDC
from
the
source
unit
or
preampli
fi
er.
This
should
allow
the
ampli
fi
er
to
turn
on
and
off
silently.
•
If
your
powered
subwoofer
is
the
cause
of
the
“thump”
sound
(not
the
other
speakers
connected
to
the
amplifier),
plug
it
into
a
different
115VAC
outlet
than
the
ampli
fi
er
so
there
is
no
power
surge
con
fl
ict.
•
Install
a
line
‐
conditioning
device.
“Hum”
Noises
in
the
Speakers
•
This
problem
is
more
than
likely
caused
by
a
“ground
loop”
in
your
system,
rather
than
a
fault
in
the
amplifier.
Follow
these
steps
to
isolate
the
main
cause
of
the
hum;
there
may
even
be
more
than
one.
Remember
to
turn
off
all
components
in
your
system,
including
the
ampli
fi
er,
before
disconnecting
or
connecting
any
cables
during
troubleshooting.
•
Try
to
have
all
of
your
equipment
on
the
same
electrical
outlet
or
circuit.
Group
all
the
low
power
components
(preamp,
CD
player,
DVD
etc.)
on
a
single
outlet
or
power
strip.
This
is
provided
that
the
overall
current
draw
from
your
equipment
does
not
exceed
the
rating
of
the
outlet
or
breaker.
•
Disconnect
all
cables,
which
come
from
outside
the
room,
and
check
if
the
hum
goes
away.
This
includes
such
connections
as
cable
TV,
satellite
TV,
or
roof
top
antennas.
Make
sure
that
they
are
disconnected
where
they
fi
rst
enter
the
room,
so
they
are
making
no
connection
to
the
preamplifier
or
the
TV,
or
any
other
component.
If
the
hum
is
caused
by
the
cable
TV
line,
then
you
will
need
a
“ground
loop
isolator.”
This
is
an
inexpensive
device
fi
tted
in
line
with
the
coaxial
cable
feed.
Contact
your
Cable
Company
or
Emotiva
for
assistance.
•
Disconnect
all
connections
from
the
preampli
fi
er
to
your
TV,
VCR
or
DVD.
•
As
a
test,
disconnect
any
other
component,
which
has
a
grounded
power
cord.
NOTE:
Never
remove
the
ground
pin
from
any
power
cords
(if
present).
This
is
very
dangerous.
If
the
hum
persists,
disconnect
all
the
source
components
one
at
a
time
from
the
back
of
the
preampli
fi
er,
until
you
identify
the
problem.
•
Try
moving
the
speaker
cables
away
from
any
power
cords.
Try
just
one
speaker,
connecting
it
to
each
ampli
fi
er
channel
and
see
if
one
channel
is
bad.
Check
that
the
interconnect
cables
to
the
ampli
fi
er
do
not
have
any
broken
connections.
The
best
way
to
do
this
is
to
substitute
a
known
good
connection
for
the
suspect
connection.
If
you
reverse
the
cables
and
the
problem
goes
away,
the
cable
may
be
damaged
or
broken.
This
is
possible
even
if
you
can’t
physically
see
the
break
as
the
strain
for
pulling
on
audio
cables
can
sometimes
break
the
wire
internally.
28
Содержание Ultra UPA-1
Страница 1: ......
Страница 2: ...2...
Страница 23: ...Connection Diagram using a UPA 7 for example 23...
Страница 36: ...36...