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Trouble Shooting

Symptom

Possible Cause

Remedy

The PMX-6600 is not 

receiving power.

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

The component is plugged into a 
switched outlet and the PMX-6600 
has not been turned On.

The PMX-6600 is plugged into a 
switched outlet, but power on the 
component is not On. In some 
instances, a component plugged 
into a switched outlet won’t receive 
power when the PMX-6600 is 
turned On unless the component 
power is also switched On.

• Turn the PMX-6600 power switch 
to ON position. 
• Make sure the PMX-6600’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 turned on to make 
the wall outlet active. Try turning on 
the light switches located near the 
wall outlet.

• Press the PMX-6600 resettable 
circuit breaker button in to reset. 
Please allow 10 minutes before 
attempting to reset. If reset too 
soon, the breaker will prematurely 
sense power overload and not allow 
the PMX-6600 to operate.
• If the circuit breaker continues to 
trip, try moving one or more 
components to another PMX-6600. 
Too much current may be drawing 
through one PMX-6600.

• Turn the PMX-6600 On.
• Or, please double check see if the 
tigger switch has been selected to 
“BYPASS” positions. If the BYPASS 
switch is not engaged, All 
“Switched" outlets will not supply 
power until a 12V trigger is present! 

• Turn the component power On.

The PMX-6600 is sharing AC 
power with equipment that is 
not properly grounded.

• Connect your PMX-6600 to a 
dedicated outlet.
• Try unplugging different compo-
nents from the PMX-6600 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 PMX-6600 grounding 
post.

Component is not 

receiving power.

Speakers emit a 

humming or 

buzzing noise.

The PMX-6600 is not turned On.

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