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Anyone good with car stereos?

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Timber II

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Marine grade kenwood installed in jeep. Worked great for years but quit making any sound.

Everything else seems to be working - you can change Chanel’s etc…just no sound.

Maybe it has a mute / ATT button? Manual says it does but for the life of me I can’t find it and the manual does not show it.

IMG_7494.jpeg
IMG_7492.jpeg


Any ideas?
 
Maybe the button is only on the remote? Maybe reset the thing buy disconnecting the car battery? It would be a pain to reprogram the thing, but that might be the only other option.
 
+1. Did you cycle thru various sources/CD/BT/etc? For some reason that red led is telling me something is up like it's muted for a call maybe?
 
I have similar in my boat. Seems to me there was something with the source button,top left.
 
Ok I will check these when I get home tonight - headed to farm to work a while. I appt you boys helping….i think it’s a easy fix but I ain’t real smart lol
 
Found this for ya... maybe there is something in here that will be helpful.


(basedince your Kenwood KMM-D362BT on the model prefix visible in the image) is powering on and responding to buttons but remaining silent, the issue is likely a "Protection Mode" trigger or a physical connection break.


Here is a troubleshooting guide, ordered from the easiest "software" fixes to the more hands-on hardware checks:


1. The "Soft" Reset (First Step)​


Sometimes the internal processor glitches and stops sending signals to the internal amplifier.


  • Action: Locate the small Triangle or Reset button. On this model, it is usually behind the detachable faceplate or tucked into a small hole on the front.
  • How: Use a paperclip or pen to press and hold it for about 5 seconds. The unit will reboot. You will lose your radio presets, but this often clears "silent" software bugs.

2. Check for "PROTECT" Mode​


Kenwood units have a built-in safety feature. If a speaker wire touches the metal frame of the car (a short circuit), the head unit will cut all audio to prevent the internal chip from melting.


  • The Sign: Does the screen say "PROTECT" or "MISWIRING"?
  • The Fix: If you see this, you must pull the unit out and check the wiring harness in the back. Look for any frayed wires or electrical tape that has come loose. Even one tiny strand of copper touching metal will kill the sound for all speakers.

3. Internal Amp Settings​


It is possible the internal amplifier was accidentally toggled "Off" in the settings menu (often used if someone is using external power amps).


  • Action: Push the volume knob to enter the [FUNCTION] menu.
  • Navigate: Go to [AUDIO CONTROL] > [SWITCH PREOUT] or look for an option labeled [BUILT-IN AMP].
  • Ensure: It is set to [ON].

4. Blown "Radio" Fuse (Secondary)​


Most cars have two fuses for the radio: one for Memory/Power (which allows the buttons to light up) and one for the Amplifier/Sound.


  • Action: Check your vehicle’s fuse box (usually under the dash or hood) for a fuse labeled Audio, Radio, or Amp. If the "Amp" fuse is blown, the head unit will look alive but remain silent.

5. Check the Blue/White Wire​


If your car has a factory-installed amplifier (common in "premium" sound systems like Bose or JBL), the Kenwood sends a signal through a Blue/White wire to tell that amp to wake up.


  • Potential Issue: If that connection has come loose behind the dash, your speakers will never receive power, even if the Kenwood is playing music perfectly.

Quick Tip: Try switching the source to Tuner (AM/FM). If you get static but no sound on Bluetooth, the issue is your phone pairing. If there is no sound on any source (Radio, BT, USB), it is definitely one of the wiring or internal amp issues listed above.
 
This is what ChatGPT says when I asked about a mute function. Similar to what @JLinza found.

On the Kenwood KMM-D362BT, there isn’t a dedicated “Mute” button on the faceplate. Usually you can:
  • Lower volume quickly by turning the volume knob counterclockwise.
  • If your steering wheel controls are connected, press and hold Volume Down to mute on some setups, then press Volume Up/Down once to unmute.
If your unit is stuck muted or has no sound:
  1. Press the SRC button to change sources and back.
  2. Turn the volume knob up.
  3. Check if ATT (Attenuation) is enabled in audio settings.
  4. Try a reset:
    • Remove the faceplate.
    • Press the tiny RESET button with a pen tip.
  5. Inspect the wiring if recently installed — a grounded mute wire can silence audio on Kenwood units.
 
I am far from good with car stereos. I paid a local shop to install mine a little over a year ago. I wanted CarPlay in my 2015 4Runner so I could be hands free. Driving through the mtns where we live trying to sort everything out on a phone was a nightmare. The bigger screen for maps is very nice. CarPlay is dreamy.
 
When it comes to car stereos the first thing that enters my mind in this situation is a possible wiring issue.
 
Man thanks a bunch for all the responses - I tried them all- nothing worked. Bringing to my wife’s uncle tomorrow as he is a stereo guru - we will see lol
Thanks again boys
 
I’m familiar w the wallup move and haven’t found it to be helpful yet but it’s worth another try after I exhaust my current resources haha
 
I’m familiar w the wallup move and haven’t found it to be helpful yet but it’s worth another try after I exhaust my current resources haha
Sometimes quite satisfying!

Ryan
 
Having a rock station on the AM dial is probably confusing the poor stereo. AM up here is either sports, talk, classical or Jazz. Rock is reserved for the FM dial. Seriously I agree with others and do the soft reboot.


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I've been using Kenwood's for years and have gone through several. I would Bench test it. Remove it from the vehicle, hook it up to 12V and test sound to a speaker and check all 4 channels. With the power interrupted there should be no mute, and all user programming should be lost.
My Kenwood in my truck currently has no sound, and I thought it was the unit, but I bench tested it and it had sound, so I traced it to my 4-channel amplifier is bad with no output. Unfortunately, my alpine amplifier is discontinued and a new one from Crutchfield is almost $400. That's probably why they have some left on the shelf. I listen to the birds and the wind blowing now. Good luck.
 
Uncle was no help, but he was glad to get the 2 packages of fresh fish for his efforts.

Gonna try to find a stereo install guy to look at it ai this point.
 
I put in prolly a dozen systems over the years. Some worth more than the car itself :emoji_laughing: My gut is telling me you need to start looking for another unit.
 
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