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Most of the time find it is not the output transistors. When you replaced them did you adjust the bias etc correctly. Do you have audio driving those transistorts? if not it may be one of the ic;s
You're not going to get any difference using an optical cable. In fact, your receiver cannot look at both jacks at once anyway. If you select an input, it only looks at one jack, it cannot take info from both.
When turning it on hold the enter key at the same time to reset the machine back to the factory settings...worked for me when I had that exact problem.
If Aiwa Amp has digital input, just hook it. and if it doesn't have any digital input, hook olf fashione red and white at rear of Aiwa in Aux or Video input like that and other end will go to Monitor Out (red and white) in Bravia TV.
If it has an "AUX" input or any other type of RCA jacks for an input, you can connect the TV RCA audio jacks output to the input RCA jacks of the Aiwa.
That's what you would need.
RCA audio outputs on the TV
RCA audio input on the Aiwa
Just look at the back of each unit and see if it has them. RCA audio jacks are the small circular red and white jacks. They will be labed on each unit what they are for. You need output jacks on the TV and input jacks (but not for phono) on the Aiwa.
I'm fairly certain this is a cable signal issue... I have had my digital audio cut in and out and the cable company traced it to a weak signal and replaced the cabling. No issues since.
Just an FYI, my setup is a Sony 6.1 with an Optical cable. There is a Blue Light indicator for Surround and when I had the problem, the receiver's light would go off and the display "blinked."
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