Stan, We are talking two engines and I believe both our symptoms are the same. If you read thru his post his transition to half volume is the same. Since his engine runs with this reduced volume we know he has good 5V (otherwise the engine would not startup. Since the sounds stop abrubtly when power is removed, we know the battery circuit is not working. He used the battery in a different engine and it worked fine.
If the battery isn't dead/shorted, then there is no reason to have sound volume drop without another problem.
The traditional training is that the PS board is bad. If this is a Rev B PS then the battery circuit parts are obsolete (unless we get lucky with the small SMD resistor).
What I have found is that the processor board also controls the Battery circuit. Same symptoms, but when I use the PS in a good processor board with same battery the battery circuit and volume work fine. New PS won't work with processor board.
So I was hoping you had some measurements on the processor board or PS that would indicate if this signal is present or not. Off course if it is a DSP vice one of the other passive devices or microcontrollers then it really doesn't matter since replacing a DSP isn't going to happen outside of a factory. :-)
I told the owner a test of the PS board first, followed by the processor. Validating the symptom via DMM measurements doesn't really advance the troubleshooting in my opinion. It doesn't distinguish which board is bad.
What I know is that static reading on the 5V circuit are normal before start up. After start up and shut down, they are much lower for a period of time. I can watch the resistance build back up. Not sure if it is a capacitor discharging, or some other device, but resistance is low and this could be causing a heavier draw on the 5V regulator, or the 3.3V is dragged down and disrupting the processor. For me it is curiosity and the hope a simpled device can be isolated so the boards can be repaired instead of replaced. G