I had the sane problem: No audio out from any source. Although I was unable to find a schematic or service manual, I did find the defective part was labeled on the circuit board as Q401 and replaced it with RadioShack part number 276-2009 (MPS2222A NPN Transistor TO-92 case NPN silicon). This is not an exact match, but is available at most RadioShack locations for under $1 and has fixed the problem.
You do not need to "match" the speaker wattage with your unit. Choose speakers that sound good, and do not turn the volume up past where it sounds good. Wattage numbers on speakers really mean very little, and certainly are not something to choose by.
First, I'm not a Pyle tech. But back in the day I used to be an audio freak (1970's 4 channel all-the-way!)
* I tried to get the exact specs on your receiver but I suspect it's a non-amplified output. RCA jacks almost never have a high level output. (yes, the old 1940-60's used RCA jacks for speaker high level output. But you have a late model receiver.) Most likely you need a separate amp to power the sub woofer (unless it has it's own power amps.) You may still use another audio amplifier if you have a spare (mono or stereo won't mater as you only use one channel) but be aware that low frequency use way more power than normal frequencies (600 to 3KHz) The low end (50 to 300 Hz) will burn out any speaker and amp as the lower the frequency it's like hooking up a car battery directly to the speaker! If you have an old style vinyl record player that's playing a warped record. watch the speaker flap around to the wave of the record. Need to turn on the 50 Hz cancel out button to prevent speaker blowout!
* This link is still for a powered woofer. It looks like the same PD3000 receiver as yours though I can't be sure:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OXEtib5OnGI
* This is an external "Powered" sub woofer (powered amp and additional cross over "filter" to extract just the lower frequencies. The following you tube link is a detailed example of how this type of system works:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZpSAQDjuWN0
Aloha, ukeboy57
RCA or Phono type plugs only have a single pin plus ground and so one plug and lead assembly is needed for each channel..
It is important to match the output of the tuner to the input of the amplifier. This is easy if the amp has a dedicated tuner input but if it hasn't it is best to study the instructions, though at a push the line-in or auxiliary input might provide satisfactory reproduction.
I had a brief look at the spec and it says the speaker outputs are banana sockets/plugs.
Once the four speakers are connected, or two with the fader control adjusted, it should produce good sound and if it does the next stage will be to connect the subwoofer with RCA plugs into the dedicated outputs.
I suggest you reread the manual.
I haven't been able to find much about this particular model. I take it that you don't have the original power adapter, because it's usually labeled on the black box what the voltage should be. My only other suggestion is to look on the back of the amplifier. there is usually a label next to there the plug goes into the amp that will say what the input voltage should be. Best of luck
It will work but the sound quality will be quite bad as the audio input is around 600 ohms and you have 8 ohms from the speaker output, you can build a crossover circuit quite easily for a few dollars
With the drive inserted in a computer, open file explorer and find the drive and right click on it and select properties and then tools and select check disk for errors.. If that cannot repair it you may need to download a program to recover the files.