Sir mike1856 . . . . .
Looks like both Sir Dorkes and my manuals are different from yours.( With that high of a fuse count that would be about one fuse per each 4 kilos of amplifier weight.)
The two 5 amps should be for both of the AF output to speaker feeds.
BUT I don't see them on my schematic
That's a slow blow type such that it wont blow on heavy audio peaks but blow on a definite sustained overload.
I believe that a Buss fuse brand will look like this:
In looking at the AKAI AA-1200 schematic which purportedly assimilates with its little brother AA-1175.
In looking at the schematic page which has the two power transformers being located at bottom right corner, as T901 and T902 designations, each transformer has 3 fuse holders, of which you use ONLY the fuse in the holder relevant to your line voltage supply.
With you being a You-are-a-peein', that would be the 230VAC or 240VAC holder, with You-a-knowin' . . . and the correct fuse being a 3.15 A in either case.
NEVER saw any 4 amps fuses in the speaker lines on the schema..
Your units problem will VERY likely be a problem with its overload circuitry which is associated with the units two audio output stages that connect into your speakers.
Look at the 10 o clock position from those transformers on the schema towards the center of the page.
There is RL1 overload relay that has the right and left outputs from the power amps coming in on its left side and exiting from the right side and they pair with shared ground connections at the speakers other terminals.
If all is WELL, to then feed amplifier audio to the right and power your speakers, the relay closes and there is sound..
( There is a possibility that 2 speaker line fuses might be in the cryptic rectangle to the left of the relay.)
They are being in the speaker audio output flow path.
In normal turn on of the system there is some delay for all conditions to settle and
THEN the RL1 closes to engage your speakers.
What I think that is happening on your unit, is that there is some imbalanced DC voltage being on one of the power amp output lines and is detected by the overload circuitry and it in turn either never engages the RL1 relay, or it powers down and opens the connection to the speakers, potentially saving them from being fried if that voltage is excessive.
Find that RL1 and hold your finger to its case to detect its action during a power up of the amp.
No clickee ? 1 Clickee? 2 Clickee?
which has on board a multi metre complete with instruction manual which I intend to learn to use
RELEVANCE . . .
I read that as just being
INHERITED BOOTY, in amongst the adjunct equipment that the last owner decided to leave for the new owner. Unless it was an Estate sale and you might have
scored all kinds and sorts of desirable goodies.
73's de Edd