Help, I have fried my Sony 777ES receiver!

Collapse
This topic is closed.
X
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • DavidY
    Member
    • Aug 2000
    • 67

    Help, I have fried my Sony 777ES receiver!

    Tonight, I was using a test tone CD to evaluate my dual Mission subs. Then suddenly, half way through, my Sony receiver sparked and started flaming....then it went into protection mode. I am pretty sure that there was a short circuit somewhere. Unhooked everything...except the power plug and turned it on again. Within five seconds, it then goes into protection mode. Shoot! It appears that my Sony 777ES has been fried. Is there anything that I can do....before I take it in for servicing? Will clearing the receiver's memory do anything?

    Dave
  • John Kotches
    Moderator Emeritus
    • Jan 2001
    • 140

    #2
    Turn the 777 off.

    Disconnect all speaker cables from the 777, including the subwoofer.

    Turn the 777 on. Does it go into protection mode then? If it doesn't, it might not be the 777.

    Power it off, add the left channel speaker cable. Does it go into protection mode?

    Proceed through all the output channels. My guess is that you've got a bad connection somewhere, and disconnecting and reconnecting will solve the problem.

    Your Sony doesn't have those god awful spring clips does it? If that's the case, the receiver will go into protection mode quite easily, if you don't keep the cables seperated.

    Anyway, as tedious and methodical as this seems, it will help you isolate what is actually causing the system mayhem.

    Try it out, and see what you learn.

    Regards,




    ---
    Editor, PC/Home Theater
    Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity
    My Home Theater
    NEC LT-150 specific page.
    ---
    Editor, PC/Home Theater
    Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity
    My Home Theater
    NEC LT-150 specific page.

    Comment

    • Lexman
      Super Senior Member
      • Jun 2000
      • 1777

      #3
      This statement causes me much concern:

      my Sony receiver sparked and started flaming
      Now, be specific, was it just a spark from a cable at the back of the unit? Was it a true open flame coming out of the vent area? If the latter, don't plug it back in at all. Either immediately take it to Sony for service, or drop it off a 5 story building. Should you choose the latter, I recommend an upgrade.

      There I said it, upgrade. Doesn't that feel good?

      Goodluck David with this problem, and please be careful.

      Lex

      Comment

      • Andrew Pratt
        Moderator Emeritus
        • Aug 2000
        • 16507

        #4
        ouch If its as bad as you made it seem with the sparks etc. and it goes into protecting mode even with nothing plugged it I'd return it. Even if it seems ok I'd still likely return it since something might have either failed or severely weakened and will fail later (likely after the warrenty ends)




        Comment

        • DavidY
          Member
          • Aug 2000
          • 67

          #5
          Yes, there were flames, at least several inches high, coming out the middle vents of the receiver. I am sure that the flames must have melted something....burnt smell everywhere.

          I will be contact my local Sony dealer to see what can be done, warranty wise. Hopefully, the warranty will cover the damage done. If not, I will be extremely peeved.

          I am not looking forward to going back to old Technics DD/DTS setup. Damn spring clips.

          BTW, I was using bananas on the Sony 777ES with fronts bi-wired with 14 gauge wire. There is no way of getting the speaker wire into the Technics. I will have remove the biwiring and the bananas so I can properly connect the speaker cables.

          *** One lesson learned the hard way....always check and double and triple check your speaker ends so they don't short circuit your receiver. ***

          Dave

          Comment

          • John Kotches
            Moderator Emeritus
            • Jan 2001
            • 140

            #6
            Ya know, I really have to start reading these Help! posts a little more carefully.

            Somehow I missed the words sparking and flaming and got focused on the words protection mode instead!

            Hachi Machi!

            Flames bad! Return to manufacturer. Do not pass Go! Do not collect $200.

            Regards,




            ---
            Editor, PC/Home Theater
            Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity
            My Home Theater
            NEC LT-150 specific page.
            ---
            Editor, PC/Home Theater
            Secrets of Home Theater and High Fidelity
            My Home Theater
            NEC LT-150 specific page.

            Comment

            • SMiLEY
              Member
              • Sep 2000
              • 45

              #7
              In your posts it sounds like you want to get this fixed...

              How new is your receiver? If it's at all possible I'd get a replacement. Andrew is right, you don't want that thing failing on you later.

              Comment

              • Ken McDaniel
                Senior Member
                • Aug 2000
                • 170

                #8
                Holy smokes. One word: TOAST. You're then second chap I've heard with that problem. If this becomes a problem, lateral transfer or upgrade.




                Ken
                Ken

                Comment

                • DavidY
                  Member
                  • Aug 2000
                  • 67

                  #9
                  Thanks for the replies. Yesterday, my local dealer sent the damaged 777ES receiver back to Sony Canada for repair. Hopefully, the damage will be covered by the 3 year warranty.

                  As for this receiver, I have had it for just over 7 months. At this time, I have no plans to upgrade it.

                  To maintain my HT fix, I moved my Technics DD/DTS receiver/decoder from the bedroom. Luckily, I did not sell it. However, I had to change all the bananas to bare wire and disconnect all the bi-wired speaker cables to fit the Technic's clip on speaker terminals.

                  Dave

                  Comment

                  • P-Dub
                    Office Moderator
                    • Aug 2000
                    • 6766

                    #10
                    David, I hope things turn out for you. Flames are bad.




                    Paul

                    There are three kinds of people in this world; those that can count, and those that can't.
                    Paul

                    There are three kinds of people in this world; those that can count, and those that can't.

                    Comment

                    • Andrew Pratt
                      Moderator Emeritus
                      • Aug 2000
                      • 16507

                      #11
                      keep us posted on what happens with that receiver.




                      Comment

                      Working...
                      Searching...Please wait.
                      An unexpected error was returned: 'Your submission could not be processed because you have logged in since the previous page was loaded.

                      Please push the back button and reload the previous window.'
                      An unexpected error was returned: 'Your submission could not be processed because the token has expired.

                      Please push the back button and reload the previous window.'
                      An internal error has occurred and the module cannot be displayed.
                      There are no results that meet this criteria.
                      Search Result for "|||"