Kenwood Kr-a5020 User Manual
This review is for a modified Kenwood KT-5500 tuner. This model came with the optional walnut veneer wood case. The mods are 2 PCB adder filter boards.
Advc 110 windows 7 driver. Kenwood RC-6020 Original AV Receiver KR-V6020 KR-A5020/A5520 Remote. KENWOOD KR-8010 Stereo Receiver Original Manual/User Manual Top Zust.
The mods were added by Bill Ammons of Phoenix, Arizona. This tuner is a gem. My pre-disposition towards most Kenwood products is that they are solid,fairly well built but unspectacular sonically. Not so with Kenwoods really fine KT tuner line.
This tuner has excellent capturing ability, very quiet while changing stations and exceptional FM. The ergonomics are simple and straight forward- far superior to the digital dreck that followed this excellent line. I highly recommend. This review is for a modified Kenwood KT-5500 tuner. This model came with the optional walnut veneer wood case. The mods are 2 PCB adder filter boards.
The mods were added by Bill Ammons of Phoenix, Arizona. This tuner is a gem. My pre-disposition towards most Kenwood products is that they are solid,fairly well built but unspectacular sonically. Not so with Kenwoods really fine KT tuner line. This tuner has excellent capturing ability, very quiet while changing stations and exceptional FM.
The ergonomics are simple and straight forward- far superior to the digital dreck that followed this excellent line. I highly recommend.
If I understand your setup, you've connected the receiver antenna terminal to the output of the antenna amplifier. If this is true, I'd suggest trying the receiver using a plain old FM dipole antenna (available at Radio Shack and other stores) or even just a piece of wire hooked to the antenna terminal. You should be able to pick up some local FM stations then. What might be happening is that the FM is being filtered out by the amplifier. Some amps made mainly as a TV signal booster have an FM trap designed to block the FM broadcast band. In the analog broadcast days, the FM band was right near the sound part of a TV signal, and the trap was there to prevent interference. It may be filtering out your FM band.It may also be possible that you're just overloading the FM antenna input with the amplified signal.
Sometimes a signal can be too strong. Using a simple wire antenna will let you test the receiver by itself. Other than connecting an antenna you shouldn't have to do any setup for FM reception.
If you still get no stations at all when using a simple antenna, then the receiver may need service. But I doubt Circuit City would have sold a floor model that was defective, even at the very end, unless it was clearly marked as such and sold 'as-is'.
I'm pretty sure you'll find that the receiver works with an antenna made for FM.
Sep 14, 2011 .
Hi,yes you can connect Kenwood KR-4600 to an ipod. You will need an RCA cable. Connect the RCA (red and black to the input of the Kenwood KR-4600.You have options of inputs to use. Either input at the back of the Kenwood KR-4600,or tape A and tape B.which ever you wan to use.
After connecting the red and black RCA to Kenwood KR-4600, then connect the other jack end to the ipod, and go the front of the Kenwood KR-4600 to activate the input selection knob to the desired input being selected at the back of the Kenwood KR-4600. And don't forget to turn on the volume of the Kenwood KR-4600 and also the iPod volume. And after that your done. Good luck to you. Aug 10, 2011 .