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Sure the new battery has power?
Did you put the battery in correct? are all contacts (in the amp and on the battery) clean and shiny?
Check all this, before you press the on button.
I'm not sure i understand you question? You would come out of the left and right XLR outputs on the board and into the two left and right XLR inputs on the amplifier. If you need more help and the dealer who sold you the gear isn't willing/able to assist you, Peavey customer service is quite good about walking people through problems. You can reach them at 877-732-8391.
I'm not sure, but I believe this has a small sound card inside like in a pc and later model guitar amps. This card runs reverb and things like that and it also may have a small power plug going to it. I have found on many guitar amps that when this plug gets dirty, or possibly just a weak connection, they usually create static noises and then it echoes that noise. I hope this helps you.
These had a little switch on the far right side that shifted modes from stereo to main and monitor. Check the position as it is tiny push button. Also try sending line levels DIRECTELY into the power amp inpout jacks to verify the amps are both OK... if not, the repair shop is only option... there is only one main fuse for the amp and if one side is working, then the fuse is good.
You LIKELY have a bad filter capacitor. The additional load of the Triode load is probably dragging the supply causing flattopping and the power supply ripple frequency to come through. Have the unit serviced.
One needs to control the FX SENT to the effects unit with the FX1 and FX2 controls for each mic channel. You should see the levels on the tiny histogram alongside the effects selection dials/indicators. Next select the effect number you want so it is displayed in the window. Then PUSH in on the selector for each of the two effects to activate the selected effect. Now, lastly advance the FX to MAIN knobs to control the amount sent to the main mix. Some of the effects are subtle so try different ones.
Sounds like the amp is going into a protective mode. Make sure your outputs aren't shorted. If you're into electronics, look for bulging electrolytic capacitors or blown transistors. Something is tripping the safety in the unit!
Ok, so I hope you realize the Fender FM25DSP guitar amplifier is an "entry level" NON-valve amp with a DSP chip that has model shaping tones. I am sorry but this is a toy and Fender did not spend the tens of thousands of US dollars to have built-in tones that truly 'kill". This not digital modelling like Line 6 or Fractal Audio did and so you have a problem from the start. This amp was always intended as an entry level amp for the bedroom only and never to be used on stage.
Jazz and acoustic modes have some similarities requiring mid-range boost and some rounding. Not easy to achieve with a DSP chip that costs about US$10 to manufacture. Sorry, consider using the amp for practice but look at a more serious valve amps for live on stage
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