SOURCE: NAD T760
You should connect the RCA connectors from your turntable into the phono input of the preamp. Also, make sure you have the grounding wire from the TT connected to the grounding on the preamp (if you do not have a grounding point, then just connect it to one of the screws on the preamp). Then connect the output from the preamp to either the Tape or the CD points on the T760. On the front panel press tape monitor and you're done.
Check and let me know how it goes. My set up's working fine except for clarity, which still needs to be perfected. I'm using a normal step-up phono stage.
Regs/ Avinash
SOURCE: NAD T760 remote control
You could buy a universal remote control and try the following NAD audio remote codes to program it with:
NAD
575 773 975
I read somewhere else that the 'Supplied Code for NAD receivers' was 033, but cannot confirm this. Try the first 3 first.
Universal remotes tend to be pretty cheap, certainly cheaper than buying one from NAD.
Good Luck
Chris (ziraffa)
SOURCE: No signal from sub connected to NAD T760 in test mode.
Try using front pre out to the sub from the receiver. the crossover is in the sub anyway. If this works change your settings on the receiver and test again. If sub is still inop, could be an internal issue with the sub amp. Does your sub amp have an on/auto/off switch or light? check that as well. Hope this helps, if you need further assistance, send a reply and I'll help some more
Reference No Part Number Description
M751*AH 5120-0200-0 Fuse 5A 125V Time Lag 5x20 MM MITI/UL/CSA
M754*AH 5120-0052-0 Fuse 1.6A 250V Time Lag 5x20 MM UL/CSA
M752*C 5120-0024-0 Fuse 3.15A 250V Time Lag 5x20 MM SEMKO/VDE
Check them first and inform me which one has blown out. I'll give you detais after that. OK.
Generally speaking, an amp protects itself from heat, shorts, overloads and operator exuberance by refusing to turn on or stay on.
Overloads can be from excessive periods of high output or marginally low impedance loading by the speakers; and shorts would be wiring issues or a speaker blowing up.
You should be able to feel if it's hot. WHY is it overheating? Make sure it has sufficient ventilation on all sides and that vent holes are not blocked by dust balls. Ensure the fan (if equipped) is running as designed (some only operate on demand). Clean dust and debris from it.
If the amp comes back on after cooling, you're lucky. They only have so many self-protection cycles in their lives so continuously resetting or cycling their power without addressing the cause can do more harm than good.
If it protects immediately on a cool power up you should disconnect the speaker connections and try it 'naked'. If it comes up then diagnose which lead(s) are shorted. If it does not come up the problem is internal and should be left to an experienced and competent hands-on tech.
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