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On 05 October 2015 at 18:30 Jerry Durand via Stagecraft <stagecraft@theatrical.net> wrote:
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<span face="Arial" style="font-family: Arial;">A customer called in a panic, he got two audio amps for a project and one is missing the "caps" on the back and no sound comes out. Got him to send a picture of these mysterious caps. They go from "PRE OUT" to "MAIN IN". Oh, THOSE "caps". I told him they're jumpers, use regular audio cable. He seemed doubtful and wanted the exact replacement. Sorry, I didn't supply the amplifiers, try the cables.<br /> <br /> Disaster averted. <br /> <br /> Apparently the manual doesn't mention this at all, how is the average consumer like this guy supposed to make things work?</span>
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<p>By applying his or her intelligence. Although it seems to me to be a daft way to make an amplifier. Presumably it allows for the insertion of some signal processing device between the pre-amplifier and input selector and the main power amplifier. Why you would want to do this is hidden from me.</p>
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