The receiver of the left unit doesn't get any frequency and the receiver on the right side gets the frequency but no audio come through. What could it be?
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Well the basic connection of the speakers would be the same as another stereo speaker pair. Wire the left and right speakers to the L/R Front Surround speakers on the Denon.
With the 901's I am assuming that there is an external equalizer supplied by Bose. Typically this EQ is installed in a tape loop on the receiver/amp so that it is ahead of the power amplifier that drives the speakers. This EQ needs to be there to attempt to get reasonable frequency response from a speaker that has only 4" drivers. I'm not sure I see any reasonable way to make the EQ work with the Denon AV receiver. You'd likely be better off using the Bose speakers in a dedicated 2-channel stereo and getting a set of speakers for the AV usage.
I would suggest that you change your operating frequency. The antenna being removed suggests that the receiver is picking up interference on that frequency. This frequency is in the UHF TV band, and although analog TV no longer exists, digital TV still uses some of the frequencies.
It helps to know the details of BOTH entities when an inter-connection is involved.
Most 'new' receivers don't support old-school TT's.
"PHONO" is the only designated connection on an audio device that is literal and exclusive. Nothing but PHONO will work right on it and old-school turntables would require it to preamplify and frequency-correct the tiny current produced by a Phono cartridge. Look up RIAA equalization.
If your unit doesn't have a PHONO connection AND your TT doesn't have a self-contained preamp you will have to get a Phono Preamp to connect between the TT and any Line Level input, like Aux.
Make sure that the audio output is present in the RCA terminals to which you have plugged in the remote main unit. The power to this unit also must be in order so that it is transmitting from the main unit.
Check the rca output with an amplifier to confirm , if there is audio then the remote headphone must mesh up to the main unit to receive the audio. Please make sure the frequency is also selected and locked in, if this is correct and the unit is not locking it can a fault in the unit which must be opened out to be checked.
could be 2 things....
1) The receiver could be set to feed the right speaker with more volume. Check the volume setting for each individual speaker on the receiver.
2) The cable connecting the left input from your dvd player is not connected properly or is bad. Try swapping the left and right audio input cables to see if this moves the problem to the other side. If it does - get a new cable.
Likely the control is old and dirty. It is known as a rheostat on older units and often a little contact cleaner on it will work. A simple thing to try that might work is to rotate the knob back and forth, left to right, each time going to full stop. do this several, several times. See if this makes things better. Of course, the assumption I am making is that the right speaker is operating normally. If you switch out the left speaker for the right, and the problem persists, on the same side, it is the receiver. If the problem now appears on the left side, it is a speaker issue and not the receiver. Good luck and let us know how it goes.
Make sure the subwoofer is set to On in the setup menu. Should be able to access this setting from the front panel, using the click wheel and the left/right buttons above the wheel. Push the setup button to get to the right menu. Set subwoofer to 'on' and speaker size to 'small'. This receiver has a fixed crossover, so make sure to turn the crossover setting on the subwoofer to the maximum setting (highest frequency) to ensure no signal is lost.
Just use the left input on the sub. The sub frequency components are generally across both channels, the left and right are to allow for easier integration with systems that have no specific sub output, a low pass filter is applied to the audio, left and right get mixed, and then feed to the subs internal amp. I advise for performance to use line level(low level-NOT speaker) inputs wherever possible. If you have any other questions, I am here to help ya. A "FixYa"rating would help my profile. Thanks.
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