Alright. I stopped by The Source on my way home and picked up a multi-meter. After getting a defective unit (jeez) I came home and ran continuity checks on my speaker wire. No issues.
For fun I stuck the taps into the speakers I'm using and the audible alarm sounded. I assume that's fine as there's probably some way for a signal to make it through the speaker. Am I correct in assuming that? I tried it on 3 of the 5 and they all did the same thing. Then I went and tested an old speaker and it did the same.
So now I'm currently updating to firmware 1.08 in the hopes it's some glitch but I'm not holding my breath that will solve the problem.
As it stands I've tested the wires, re-cut and reconnected them, and STILL it won't stay on longer than a few seconds under load.
EDIT: Update is done and still no go. It stayed on a little longer than normal but as soon as it got loud the unit cut out. BUT, it seems as though it will work if I keep the volume relatively low. Right now I only have one speaker hooked up but a movie has been playing for about 5 minutes now with no issue.
Am I dealing with a defective unit?
The meter will make the continuity tone as long as it's within a certain range. You need to check the speaker wires, too. Disconnect them from the speaker AND the receiver and connect the probes to the meter's leads. You need to set the meter to the lowest range (often 200 Ohms) and once the + is on one lead and the - is on the other, you should see OL on the meter If you see anything when the meter is on the lowest range, you have a short. This could be from a table or chair sitting on the wire, pets, exposed wire at the ends (1/2" maximum), one strand touching from one side to the other or if the wires were hidden in the walls before the drywall went up, a nail or screw.
You would only need a problem on one speaker cable to cause the warning. If you can run it with one speaker at all normal volume levels, that one is fine but the others may have problems. Isolate each speaker and run it. If it works on all but one, that one needs to be repaired or replaced.
What numbers did you see when you connected directly to the speakers? Write them down for your reference. If your speakers show less than 4 Ohms, the receiver may not work with that load. What speakers are you using?
If you have a way to measure the AC voltage, do that, too. Low electrical service voltage will cause all kinds of problems.