A friend had the same problem with floor standing Wharfdales using a newer mid-fi Onkyo receiver. Better electronics helped a bit but not much.
Have I got the wrong amp? or the wrong speakers?
Hi all, I'm new to the forum and a relative beginner at hifi, so please excuse the (potentially) dumb question.
In homage to my late father, and the basic, budget setup he had when I was a kid, I've recently acquired a vintage AKAI AA-1150 receiver (circa 1979 I think) and paired it with brand new Wharfedale EVO 4.2 large bookcase speakers.
Two problems -
First, I think the speakers are waaay too sensitive for the amp - turn the volume up to 3 and the room is shaking. Taking the dial to 11 would definitely kill the Wharfedales. My old speakers (Paradigm Atom) suffer too, but a little less. Its definitely the amplifier!
Second, the sound is impossibly forward and bright. Incredibly clear, with amazing detail (from both vinyl & DAC) but really hard on the ears.
Do I need to ditch the nostalgia and get a warmer, 21st Century integrated amplifier? Or is there some setting I've missed somewhere?
All suggestions welcomed!
In homage to my late father, and the basic, budget setup he had when I was a kid, I've recently acquired a vintage AKAI AA-1150 receiver (circa 1979 I think) and paired it with brand new Wharfedale EVO 4.2 large bookcase speakers.
Two problems -
First, I think the speakers are waaay too sensitive for the amp - turn the volume up to 3 and the room is shaking. Taking the dial to 11 would definitely kill the Wharfedales. My old speakers (Paradigm Atom) suffer too, but a little less. Its definitely the amplifier!
Second, the sound is impossibly forward and bright. Incredibly clear, with amazing detail (from both vinyl & DAC) but really hard on the ears.
Do I need to ditch the nostalgia and get a warmer, 21st Century integrated amplifier? Or is there some setting I've missed somewhere?
All suggestions welcomed!
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- 47 posts total
- 47 posts total