Troubleshooting – Monster HDP 2500 Manuel d'utilisation

Page 18

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12

TROUBLESHOOTING

Symptom

Possible Cause

Remedy

The PowerCenter is
not receiving power.

The PowerCenter is not turned On.

Turn the PowerCenter switch on.

Make sure the PowerCenter’s AC power plug is plugged into a properly
grounded 120 volts (nominal) wall outlet.

In some households, a wall switch may need to be thrown to make the wall
outlet active. Try turning on the light switches located near the wall outlet.

Too many devices are connected, causing an overload,
tripping the Thermal Circuit Breaker.

Press the PowerCenter Thermal Circuit Breaker button in to reset. Please allow
10 minutes before attempting to reset. If you reset too soon, the breaker will
prematurely sense power overload and will not allow unit to operate.

If the Circuit Breaker continues to trip, try moving one or more components
to another PowerCenter, or using a PowerCenter with higher capacity (maximum
amps rating). You may be drawing too much current through one PowerCenter.

Component is
not receiving power.

The component is plugged into a switched outlet
and the PowerCenter has not been turned On.

Turn the PowerCenter On.

Or, plug the component into an Unswitched outlet.

The PowerCenter is turned On but component plugged
into a Switched outlet is not on because its own power
switch is Off.

Turn the component power On.

Speakers emit
a humming or
buzzing noise.

The PowerCenter is sharing AC power with equipment
that is not properly grounded.

Connect your PowerCenter to a dedicated outlet.

Try unplugging different components from the PowerCenter one at a time to see
if the noise stops. If a component is discovered to be improperly grounded, attach a
copper wire from the component’s chassis to the PowerCenter’s grounding post.

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