The frigid weather passed, the ice melted, and the dense fog finally lifted, so the band got together Thursday night. It was Bert, the bass player's first time there since we got the DP24 from the family of our deceased member. He and I had worked together for several years back in the day and have a history of troubleshooting together. I sat with my laptop and tablet and let him man the recorder. We wanted to start as close to right out of the box as possible. We downloaded and loaded the latest firmware. We reformatted the SD card. We re-initialised the factory settings (which we figured was overkill, but we did it anyway). We created a song using current settings. We loaded the song and assigned inputs to tracks. Using a dynamic mic we talked into the mic while adjusting the trim pot. There was no indication of a signal on the meters. We tried this on multiple inputs. We tried assigning the inputs to the stereo bus- nothing. We connected a line signal to multiple inputs-nothing. We tried a condenser mic using phantom power-nothing, until we got to input E. When we turned on the phantom power the machine shut down immediately. It didn't turn off normally, the display went black immediately. We waited a while and turned it back on, and it powered up as it should. We decided to look at the block diagram and we both realized together that the first indication of a signal presence would be the overload light. I took the condenser mic, turned on the phantom power, put the mic to my lips, cupped my hands around the top of the mic, and screamed into it. No light. We were convinced, at that point, that there was something wrong with that input board. We were explaining to the other guys what we thought was wrong with it when a friend of the band came through the door. He saw the machine was on and asked if we were tracking. We explained what we had tried and what we thought was wrong. He said the only thing he knew about them was that people say that if you don't use the original Tascam power supply they won't work right. He asked if we were using the original, and we didn't know. We hadn't set it up. SO, we turned it off and looked. It was NOT a Tascam supply, it was a Behringer. AND, it wasn't a 12 volt DC supply. It was a 9 volt AC supply. Any decent DC powered equipment will have blocking diodes to prevent reverse powering, so the fact that it was an AC supply didn't worry me, but it was being awfully under powered. We went through the whole house and found a 12V supply of adequate current capability, correct polarity, and matching barrel size, powered it back up, and five minutes later had recorded and played back a track. No problem, including with the E-H phantom power.