Peavey xr500c manual




















By continuing to use Reverb, you agree to these updates, and to our cookie policy. Learn More. Anyone can sell on Reverb List your item today to get it in front of thousands of eyes, quickly and easily. Learn more on the Seller Hub. Sell Yours Now. Pro Audio Mixers Peavey. Used — Very Good. Change shipping region. I'm a newbie at the elctronics piece, so have some patience with me.

Log in or register to post comments views. Tunzzz, I dont think your amp is at fault here. If it is it will be a bad connection in the input area. I think you could do fine to clean your mains faders. Keep in mind there are plastic components in there, so if you clean it, use a plastic friendly solvent, maybe even silicon based.

If you want to rule out the amp or confirm the amp as the culprit , do a tes run where you put an aux out directly to the amp input. If your prob continues then the amp needs to be repaired. You could check the circuit path at the input and see if an obvious short has occurred, but I dont think you'll need to worry, as I'm pretty sure the problem is those mains out on the board!

Secondly just to confirm your suspicions , send the mains out into a monitors amp, and see if your problem travels from mains to monitors. Then you will have an answer.

One more thing! What is the sensitivity rating and power capacity of your speakers? How are you running your speakers, in series or parallel? That amp's speaker jacks are paralleled. If you are running them in parallel, then you are dropping the impedance to 3 ohms. If you are doing that, the amp is going into protect mode. Plus, you probably are driving, no wait..

You can check that, but I will be you money that it is your impedance. What the heck kind of speakers did you buy that are 6 ohms? Sheet, Tunzz mentioned that the system only comes back on when he cranks it! If overload was the problem then turning things down would solve his prob. What's happening here is a bad connection somewhere. Once the connection deteriorates the audio cuts out. Once the output signal becomes strong enough to pass through the bad connection, it does, and does so blaring loud!

I have seen this in fader mechanisms, patch cables, and impedance adapters, usually being the result of a poor solder connect. I am not an electronics expert, but I would be stunned if amp overload or impedance mismatch was causing this issue. Completed Items. Sold Items. Authenticity Guarantee.

More filters Not finding what you're looking for? Save peavey xrc to get e-mail alerts and updates on your eBay Feed. Shipping not specified. Results matching fewer words. Last one. I'll be using one of these in the near future That's pretty self explanatory. I don't know if it is powered or not BTW - Peavey. I'm gonna keep checking, but I don't think I can count on DL'ing the manual from them in time.

Peavey has been making the XR series powered mixers since the beginning of time, so it could be any age. That said, from the brief description you gave, it sounds like you're dealing with an old school XR Those little powered mixers were made about 25 years ago, but a lot of them are still around and working. I think they're around the same vintage as the XRB, the second generation of the famed XR series.

Does anyone remember those big old monitor power amps with built-in eq Peavey used to make? Anyway, the only powered outputs that can be fed directly to passive speakers are the two clearly labeled outputs on the rear of the unit.



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