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Connecting your stingray ii – Manley Stingray II User Manual

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Connecting Your Stingray II

Setting up this integrated amplifier is rather easy. Please refer to pages 8 & 9 for pictures of the back and sides of

the Stingray II.

1. You will be connecting power last and turning the system on after all other connections are made to prevent

ugly noises as wires are connected and to prevent possible damage to the amps and speakers. In general, it is

best to make any connections with the power off, the unit in “Standby” mode, or the volume control turned all

the way down. With all tube amps, you MUST have speakers (or a load box) properly connected to the speaker

terminals before power is turned on. Without a speaker, the voltage swings can be large enough to possibly cause

an electrical arc inside a tube, tube socket or transformer and this may damage the amp. Solid state amps operate

with no speaker connected but generally don’t tolerate a short circuit. Most tube amps will tolerate a short, but

we try to avoid this.

2. Before plugging in your interconnects, take a quick visual inspection of the tubes. Sometimes either through

shipping or unpacking things get jostled. Make sure all tubes are firmly in their sockets and standing straight up.

You might also verify that none have turned white inside. That indicates that air has leaked inside the tube (or the

vacuum leaked out!). Though it is rare, a tube is sometimes cracked or broken in shipping. It would need to be

replaced before powering up the amp.

3. On a rectangular chassis it is easy to specify front, back, sides etc - but on the 6 sided Stingray II we should

adopt a convention and refer to the sides that have the RCA inputs as Left-Back and Right-Back. We provide 3

left inputs on the Left-Back, 3 right inputs on the Right-Back, and a 1/8” input on the Left-Front. Plug in your

interconnects, one at a time, from each source (i.e. CD, Tuner, AUX, etc.) then connect each input to the appro-

priate RCA jack on the Stingray II. All RCA jacks are clearly labled as 1, 2, and 3. Each input is for all intents

functionally and electronically the same - only the labels are different. You may have to separate or split inter-

connects an extra 12 inches if they are the “paired” type or slide the loop that holds the pair together. If you need

to connect a turntable (vinyl!) you will need a separate phono preamp to raise the level from the tiny signal from

the cartridge to regular line levels. Manley builds these, as do some other manufacturers. The final interconnect

available is the 1/8” line input on the front panel.

5. Connect the speaker leads to the terminals on the far left and far right corners of the Stingray II. Be sure that

the RED (+) terminal is connected to the RED (+) wire and the WHITE (-) terminal connects to the WHITE (-)

wire. This color scheme may vary as to which color represents (-), but it is generally either black or white. Con-

nect the opposite ends to the speakers also RED to RED and WHITE to WHITE. This insures that your speak-

ers will be “in-phase”. All too often people accidently connect their speakers out-of-phase and lose most of the

lows. We have even seen this happen in “unthinkable” situations, most notably at hi-fi trade shows and in record

company executive offices. There is always some indication on the wire to help get “polarity” right but it may be

as subtle as a “ridge” on the insulation or different colored conductors. Most high quality speaker interconnects

are clearly labeled and/or color coded. Be sure that these connections are firm and solid. We do not recommend

using pliers or a wrench to tighten the terminals because one can easily overtighten or mar the finish of the bolts.

Good finger tightening is usually the best.

6. Before proceeding to the next step (power!) check that the On/Off switch on the back of the unit is in the

“Off” position. Now connect the IEC power cable to the back of the Stingray II and the other end to your mains

wall socket, or to your Power Supply Regulator if you have one.

7. Turn on the On/Off switch, and you will see a mini light-show on the front panel knobs. This will put the unit

into “Standby” mode. If you then press the “Standby” button (now glowing blue) on the front panel, it will initi-

ate a 10-second warmup/mute period and the “Standby” button light will begin to pulse. You should be seeing

the tubes begin to glow a bit. None should turn bright red - that would indicate a problem. After 10 seconds, the

unit will power on completely and the front-panel LEDs will stop pulsing and remain lit.

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