Adcom GFP 565 OP-Amp help

Just dab a bit of wire across the resistor to link it out. That will (should) connect pin 3 of the opamp to ground and remove ALL signal from that channel. If it is easier you can apply a short across that 47pF cap instead.
 
OK, good deal. That's going to be helpful for Mooly.
In the meantime, remove the R210 short. Having nothing connected to any tape in/out jacks, do a test with input into the CD jacks and listening switch set to CD. See if the problem repeats.
 
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Well shoot man, yes shorting R210 it did cut the sound.

I think you have found the answer. Look at the circuit. The wiper of the volume control should go down to ground at minimum volume. Shorting the resistor does the same... and you have proved it kills the audio. So the pot should be doing the same.

Pots that don;t make it to zero are not that uncommon and the effect is made worse by high level input sources like CD players and the like.

You could try switch OFF and then measuring the resistance across that 10meg as you turn the volume down. It should ideally go all the way to zero (0.00 ohms). Try it. Use a suitable low ohms range on the meter.

Tell us what resistance value you measure on minimum volume.
 
0.00 is what it should.

What units is the 0.40 range showing? In other words what value resistor would give that sort of reading?

For example would a 470 ohm show as 0.47 on your meter on that range meaning 0.47k ohm. Just curious what the resistance actually is. I would guess at least 40 ohm and if it were 400 ohm then that would still be loud at minimum volume.

Looks like that is the problem though.
 
Realistically it is to replace the volume control.

The control is just a potential divider of 50k total resistance. The moving wiper travels between the top and bottom of the resistive track. At the bottom end it should fully go to zero ohms removing all audio.

It would still be interesting to know what units your 0.40 was though, whether it is 40 or 400 ohms for instance.

0.40 as in 0.40 ohms would be so low as to essentially still remove all audio.
 
Well that helps me to a point. I understand some and some I don't. I'm catching on a little and learning. I'm the type of person that needs to be in a class room to get a better understanding of things. Thanks again, Mooly and jordheis.