Okay...so earlier this year I upgraded all my home theater gear to 4K. This includes the receiver(Sony STR-DN1080), Sony 65" Smart TV(XBR65X900F) and a Sony 4K Blu-ray Player(UBPx800). I also kept my Sony PS3 and added it to the system. The receiver has a 6 port in / 2 out HDMI switch built in, HDCP v2.2 compliant.
I connected the movie server to the 'Video 1' port and defined it as a 'Net Player' in the receivers setup. I made sure to connect the HDMI output port designated as the 'ARC' port on the receiver to the 'ARC' port on the television(HDMI 3). The problem I was having was when I would watched a movie on the movie server as soon as there was a loud part of a movie, like a sudden burst of gunfire or an explosion the receiver would shutdown with a message on the VFD display that said 'PROTECTOR'. On power up the volume was set to 0. When I read the relevant material on this error message it lead to believe that it was a 'power problem' or a 'bad speaker'(see included pic). I have been dealing with this from the beginning and have tried moving the power plug off my line conditioner and moving the HDMI connection to different ports on the receiver and even tried going directly into the TV, same results every time. The movie servers audio setup was tried with 'Audio Passthrough' on/off with the same problem. Movie Server is at 1.0.3.7.
So the latest movie that I bought was 'Mile 22'...the gunfight inside the house early in the movie tripped the protector circuit on the receiver no matter how the movie server was connected in the system. I played that movie on the Blu-ray player, the PS3 and an HTPC(Intel NUC8i7BEH) on 'Video 2' port and none of them tripped this safety circuit at the same point in the movie. The movie server tripped it consistently. So while going through the Audio portion in the settings on the server I wound up setting the 'Audio Passthrough' to 'On' and left all the receiver compatibility flags to their default 'On' states. After leaving setup I hit the volume toggle on the remote and seen that it was at '100', I ran it all the way down to '0' and played the movie. I did this wondering if I would get audio at all, but when the movie started I got audio so I let it play and..WALA! it didn't trip the safety circuit at the same point it always did before. The receivers master volume I leave at '35' when switching between devices connected to the receiver as this is where I like it when watching TV, Blu-ray, PS3 or content on the HTPC.
So the question I have is what is the relationship between the volume level of the movie server when using HDMI? Using the volume key on the remote after the movie has started generates a message on the screen that has a speaker symbol followed by an 'X' with a message that 'Audio Passthrough' is being activated and doesn't trip the safety circuit.
Comment