The amplifier shut down because you shorted the amplifier stereo outputs together. Dont doo dat. Keep the two stereo channels separate or mix their inputs into mono.
Thanks. It wasn't me. I googled the problem and found a query about a similar module. The user connected the two - signals together. The board shut down. This was his confirmation to the question, "Are they really differential?"
I suppose I could just put a stereo signal in and check the potential across the two - outputs.
I don't want to mix them down to mono. I want to keep them stereo.
Also... when I rent a disco rig, the usually disable the stereo outputs and only bridged mono works. Not sure if this is the same thing. I think they do that to stop people running the amp with only one speaker and torturing it.
I believe there simpler circuits with capacitors, but is it worth it, or should I just put another opamp on each output and convert it to two mono single ended outputs?
EDIT: If I understand a differential signal, at full amplitude the minus will be near the amps lower rail, say -5V, the positive will be near it's higher rail, say +5V. Giving a total voltage of +10V on the speaker. At it's lowest amplitude the + output actually goes negative and the - output goes positive, giving -10V across the speaker.
So AC coupling the two outputs and combining would not work. I need to take the difference between the two and reference that to 0V / Ground.