JWH,
I am using the HTM2 with N803 front and N805 in the rear with execelent results. Try placing the HTM1 on cinder blocks below the TV as one option. This is a cheep experiment. (You may be getting unwanted cabinet resonance because of your speaker location.)
There are many other issues that also could have an affect.
In no particular order.
Are all the cables the same.
Are your amps the same.
Is any equipment fairly new. (Burn-in) I find the B&W line to continue to burn over an extended period of time reguardless of what the book says.
You can try swaping the fronts for the rears and see what kind of sound reproduction you get in the Trifield mode.
With your current set up listen to some concerts in 5.1 and see if you notice the tonal difference. If you can't or don't the Meridian may be the issue.
There are to many possibilities to come to a logical conclusion.
Please post your results with the above. People in this forum should be able to help better than I with more information.
Remember to take the system as a whole.
I am using the HTM2 with N803 front and N805 in the rear with execelent results. Try placing the HTM1 on cinder blocks below the TV as one option. This is a cheep experiment. (You may be getting unwanted cabinet resonance because of your speaker location.)
There are many other issues that also could have an affect.
In no particular order.
Are all the cables the same.
Are your amps the same.
Is any equipment fairly new. (Burn-in) I find the B&W line to continue to burn over an extended period of time reguardless of what the book says.
You can try swaping the fronts for the rears and see what kind of sound reproduction you get in the Trifield mode.
With your current set up listen to some concerts in 5.1 and see if you notice the tonal difference. If you can't or don't the Meridian may be the issue.
There are to many possibilities to come to a logical conclusion.
Please post your results with the above. People in this forum should be able to help better than I with more information.
Remember to take the system as a whole.