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Peavey R1080052 is a bass guitar model produced by the Peavey company. It is part of the company's Classic series of instruments, which are designed to offer vintage-inspired tones and aesthetics at an affordable price. The R1080052 features a solid ash body, a maple neck with a rosewood fingerboard, and two single-coil pickups. It also has a vintage-style bridge and a set of open-gear tuners. This bass is known for its warm, punchy sound and comfortable, easy-to-play feel.
It depends on if this is a new problem on a previously working system , or if it's been going on since it was first plugged in, but geneally speaking it sounds like your impedance load is too low on the amp and it's overheating. I would double check that, but if the load is in line with the specs, it needs to go to the shop. Contact Peavey to get the autorized repair guy in your area, or you can send it to them to do inhouse repairs. They are reasonable and have access to all the needed parts, but you'd have to pay to ship it in and back. https://peavey.com/support
Sure you can, but that mixer amp is a mono amp instead of stereo. Head for radio shack and get an 1/8" stereo male phone jack to 1/4" female mono adaptor. Plug the adaper into the headphone output of your device. Then run a shielded cable with 1/4" mono phone plugs on both ends (like an electric guitar would use) from the device to one of the channels on the Peavey. Bring the volume up on both the channel and master on the amp up maybe 1/3 the way. Play a track on your device and adjust the devices out put as high as it will go with out distorting the channel input. Then adjust the amp's channel and main output as you would normally to get the final volume you need.
Old age has finally caught up with both myself and your vintage Peavey. Things like shorted diodes and transistors sometimes do not physically give themselves away, Also, many times it takes a trained eye to discern the components that have failed in a more discrete manner. It's either repair shop or replacement time which I recommend the latter.
The speaker connections are on the BACK and are "Speakon" connectors... These are special plugs and these apparently can also accept 1/4 inch plugs. It appears that the MINIMUM impedance should be no less than 4 ohms, NOT 2 ohms. One of the back connectors is for the mains, the other ois for the monitor soeakers. The FRONT connections are line level which doi NOT drive speakers,
That's easily done. Simply connect the left(or right) output of your mixer to one of the channels on the peavey. Use any line input. Since the peavey is a mono system, there's no need sending a stereo mix to it.
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