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Have you looked in the manual? Basic speaker setup with test tones will certify the basic hardware. Then onboard FM. Then add the compexity of external and digital sources.
First of all check that it has not got switched off somehow. After that, what I would do is trace the wires back (inside the unit) from the center speaker connector. This will take you back to the output semi-conductors for that channel. I would suspect these first, you might even see damage! You should anyway be able to look the numbers up on the net. If they are cheap I would replace them anyway. If that doesn't work I suggest you hunt down the service manual, it might have suggestions in it.
It either got an electrical short somewhere on the chassis or overheated. Press down the power button on the receiver and hold it until you hear a second click from inside the chassis. Then try to power it back on and go from there.
Connect the Wii to your television. Then connect the variable audio output from the TV to the audio in on the monitor section of the receiver. Then use the TV/SAT input selection on the receiver and dolby prologic 2 as your sound mode.
That's probably just for the video. Plug in the L & R RCA plugs for the sound or just use an HDMI cable between your receiver and DVD player. HDMI cables handle everything in one convenient cable.
Usually if you have a Cable or Satellite box, you would hook up a Fiber Optic or Digital Coax cable from the Sat/Cable box to the Sony Receiver. Then for HD, an HDMI cable or componet cables from the Sat/Cable box to the TV
connect them to the front left and right outputs.connecting them to the sub-woofer will give poor sound because it only pick's up bass sounds during playback
Hi
The first thing to do is disconnect the red and white audio cables from the back of the receiver, and plug them directly into the tv. If you then have sound from the DVD, then you have eliminated the possability of no audio coming out of the DVD player.
If the DVD player checks out fine, then I would try plugging the jacks into another aux input on the receiver, and select that and see what happens. Also, if there is a "tape monitor" button on your Sony, make sure it is turned off.
I'll assume the receiver has sound from other functions, so it would be rare for one of the inputs to just stop working, (but certainly not impossible), I'm not familiar with that model, and normally I would say it could just be a dirty selector switch, but since you mentioned having a remote, then switching between inputs is done by the microprocessor, not a physical switch, so if you cannnot get sound through using another input, then it could be expensive to repair.
Hope this helps, and good luck!
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