One suggestion to increase the power/attack of the M900U that worked for me: Turn off the meters. |
@hiendmmoe Where have you heard that comparison between stereo and mono? I would love to read such an evaluation. Thanks!
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@hiendmmoe
True the need to run the M900u in mono would be unnecessary if it solely
based on a speaker that was easy to drive. I’ve heard the M900u in mono
is vastly superior to one in stereo, sonically speaking.
Why seek advice if already have the answer? |
True the need to run the M900u in mono would be unnecessary if it solely based on a speaker that was easy to drive. I’ve heard the M900u in mono is vastly superior to one in stereo, sonically speaking.
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Hmmm.... I would not fault the Luxman for transient impact and precision, IME. They seem to bring out all of the startle from my beryllium mid/tweets. That's part of their attraction, I find. |
Audiodrom gave the m900u/c900u high praise with a score of 87%. However, they did have this critique: Notwithstanding all that was said the Luxman combo will most likely not appeal to anyone whose music collection favours rock’n roll. The electric guitar in Sheer Heart Attack (Queen, News of The World) is precise and full through the M-900u and the C-900u, yet it lacks ultimate bite and electrifying presence I heard through the Van Medevoort, for example. I suspect it is a kind of tax for class A as the tonal purity and textural resolution brings (almost) always along the slightest touch of transient roundness. If you like your music hard and aggressive, look elsewhere. |
I certainly agree that a 4 ohm load shouldn't cause a difficulty for the Luxman amp, in theory, and that is part of the puzzle. I have not moved speakers even a mm, just subbed in the Luxman for the BHK mono amps and I hear this difference in bass. My room is extensively treated, including bass traps. I use high quality cabling throughout, cables that have made every other component they've been hooked up to sound excellent. But it just might be that this needs some sorting to get the best of the Luxman.
I will try some speaker placement work to see if there is a new "best spot" given the change. It would be delightful if that ameliorated the issue, because the rest of the spectrum has a lot of plusses. I sure wasn't expecting a bass quality issue.... |
Room treatment, especially bass traps can make compact monitors sound a lot bigger and tighter.
I'm a big Luxman fan by the way, for much of the reasons described above, but if you haven't looked into the room, or if you inadvertently moved your speakers between amps, that may be the cause. According to the Stereophile measurements, those speakers are 4 Ohm minimum through the mid-bass, shouldn't be any problem at all.
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Hello, I own a Luxman M900u as well. I would not go running off and buying another 900u. I would consider the other gear you have connected to the amp. When inserted my 990u the mid bass and bass got better. The speed and leading edges were nicer. More real. There are so many other things that affect your mid bass and bass that my have nothing to to with the amp. I feel that the source is the most important and the amp will more than likely show the good or the bad of that signal. Given a great signal, the Luxman M900u should give you what you are looking for. But for the great signal to get to the final destination, the amp... the signal goes through a lot of other gear and cables...... so..????But if you are still wanting another Luxman M900u ? I'm considering selling mine....as I have much more gear to play with....
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You can ask the OP (as noted by spinaker above) of the MY LONG LIST OF AMPLIFIERS thread. Im sure he will be happy to provide you a detailed account of his Luxman m900 Monoblocks. They are his favorite "affordable" amp to date...and that's saying something |
I'd be interested to hear someone's comparison, too. I run TAD CR-1's, and recently acquired an M900u to try with them in place of the PS Audio BHK 300 mono's that I have been using. The stereo Luxman amp is bringing some clear virtues in the mids and highs in terms of revealing musical and harmonic information, and that is appealing; but I find that I am not as happy with its low-mid bass, where it seems less distinct, almost feeling a bit vague. This surprises me, given the 700+ damping factor that the Luxman boasts - - I would have expected greater control and definition, and I am hearing the opposite. Yes, the stereo Luxman seem able to play loud enough in my 22.5' x 15' x 8' room. But the bass quality in the match to my speakers could be better, I'm feeling.
So, if going to mono blocks would improve this bass issue, then I would have to consider if I can go that far in budget! I hope someone has direct experience that can speak to this aspect.
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Wouldn't the decision be based on the size of room, speaker sensitivity, and how loud you play. I demoed the m900u with TAD ME1 and I see no reason to go mono blocks with those speakers. |
Check in on whitecamaross’s thread. He has owned at one time both of these components and actually addresses the mono vs stereo configuration advantages. |