Simaudio 600i V2 volume control.


I will contact the seller as well as Simaudio but being a Friday night I thought I would post here to insure I am not missing something. I just purchased a NOS Simaudio 600i V2 integrated and it sounds great and everything seems to be working except,  the volume knob increases the volume turning it clockwise AND counterclockwise. Either direction and the volume goes up. The remote works fine. I am wondering if this might be setting thing. Any Simaudio exerts out there that can help clarify this issue? 

128x128davt

@classic8 this is exactly what I am experiencing. This morning it was working well and everything worked normally. I listened for about 2 hrs then  had some work to do. Now, tonight, still all is perfect. After listening for a few hours and drinking some tasty adult beverages I asked it, what the f@#%, why are you behaving this way? I had enough to drink by that time that I could hear a reply. Something about if you ignore me you will pay. I asked the amp if it had been talking to my wife and the only reply was for the display to be a brighter red. So, I am hopping things are good for now. Because it really does sound amazingly good. I will still reach out to the dealer and Simaudio. By that time I might have had enough to drink that I will be able to speak Canadian. Eh? 

@davt Hehehe! Glad it is working now - maybe @oddiofyl can explain what is happening. I am big Simaudio fan and love my 600iv2. So your unit was new in the box?

No, it was a used demo, probably 2-4 years old and has likely sat idle for a number of months. I am thinking that this idleness might affect the rather complex selection, volume dial. People have told me that the Simaudio equipment needs some time to warm up.        Or, Simaudio is made with spirits of long dead musical wraiths in the design, you know, like vacuum tubes, only not as unpredictable, and that every once in a while they act up. 

Ahh ok - I hope you enjoy it as much as I have enjoyed my 600iv2 - it’s my flagship amp. Yes, who knows what ghosts live in our machines :)

When a mechanical encoder is built there is a dielectric grease used .  That grease can get crusty and make it act exactly like OP is experiencing.   

I had a preamp and receiver that did that , I carefully opened the crimped body of the encoder , cleaned it, put it back together and problem solved.   It could be an optical encoder that's bad but I think it mechanical based on the symptoms.