Yamaha HTR 6090 will not power on.

R

Ray L

Audiophyte
I went to turn On my HTR 6090 and it would not power on I did not hear the klick of Circuit breaker turning on. I disconnected all wires and connectors and tried again but no avail. Does anybody know of any tricks or other things I can do to test this unit out I don’t believe there’s any internal fuses seeing it has a circuit breaker. I do have an extra power cable which I did try but again did not do any good. Any help or insight into this would be greatly appreciated thank you so much
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Did you unplug it for a while and then plug it back in (a soft reset). If it doesn't stay on, not much you can do....a full microprocessor/factory reset would be next step but you'd need the unit to stay on so you can run the routine....you checked that outlet the avr is plugged into, it still works fine with other gear?
 
R

Ray L

Audiophyte
Did you unplug it for a while and then plug it back in (a soft reset). If it doesn't stay on, not much you can do....a full microprocessor/factory reset would be next step but you'd need the unit to stay on so you can run the routine....you checked that outlet the avr is plugged into, it still works fine with other gear?
Yes I did unplug the cable from the rear of the unit for awhile and Tested the outlet which is good even tried other outlets choose to see if that might make a difference.
 
TLS Guy

TLS Guy

Audioholic Jedi
Yes I did unplug the cable from the rear of the unit for awhile and Tested the outlet which is good even tried other outlets choose to see if that might make a difference.
If
Yes I did unplug the cable from the rear of the unit for awhile and Tested the outlet which is good even tried other outlets choose to see if that might make a difference.
If it is completely dead then one of two things has likely happened. Either the turn on circuit has failed or the power transformer has burnt out.
That is now an old receiver and beyond it expected life. I would caution against repair of a unit that old and think that money would be better spent on a new unit.
 
R

Ray L

Audiophyte
If


If it is completely dead then one of two things has likely happened. Either the turn on circuit has failed or the power transformer has burnt out.
That is now an old receiver and beyond it expected life. I would caution against repair of a unit that old and think that money would be better spent on a new unit.
Thank you so much I really appreciate your input and I am currently looking at new units since I recently updated my TV to a 4K so I want something that’s going to be good with my home theatre
And good with my vinyl .
I have two excellent condition klipsch cf 4’s a klipsch kv3 center
PSB alpha S speakers
2 velodyne SF12BVX10 powered subs.
So I good with my speakers.
 
lovinthehd

lovinthehd

Audioholic Jedi
Yeah I would just get a new unit, time to retire that one, not likely worth repair. New avrs with phono input stages are getting rare, tend to only be found on the upper range models these days (or just get an external phono stage).
 

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