It all about matching the preamp and power amp to the speakers. You're not going to go out and buy a Krell amp for them speakers, yikes too bright. You can try different interconnects to change the sound as well, you know to soften up the sound and make it more musical. Try different things and if everything fails, take them speakers back for a refund.
Speakers sound too bright.
I just bought a new pair of Martin Logan 60xti speakers. They are too bright and fatiguing. I would like to avoid returning them. I've tried toeing them in and out. I cant get them further than 1ft away from the wall (back of speaker to wall). I have a about 1-2 hrs of play time on them. Not sure if break in will help settle the upper frequencies down. Any suggestions...?
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All speakers in the world sound distorted and bright, except Wavetouch audio Antero speaker. Compare Antero sound vs. Magico A-1, Focal Sopra No. 1, TAD Me1 below Antero https://youtu.be/LlYlIvmmg3c?si=EB_m8Mi5PRDD2vcJ&t=152 Magico - in video, Jay’s voice is perfectly natural. So, this is honest A1 sound. https://youtu.be/iLQMNJi8JAs?si=7V-pIRiieDqu1_1B Focal - People’s voice sound great in recording. So, this is real Sopra sound. https://www.youtube.com/live/Msaq4kCYclw?si=lJMZFA1mufR9DUxM&t=830 TAD - Accuphase + DCS. (expensive!) https://youtu.be/aAWLLMladgM?si=VMZwsUfb4R99zRCR Alex/Wavetouch audio |
I had similar troubles and even switching speakers did not completely ameliorate the problem. It turned out that I have a difficult room and was able to get beautiful smooth sound by addressing that. A good test was to buy some cheap gobos (portable sound absorption panels on stands) and use them to block the first reflection points (use a mirror to find those). Also I did some near field listening. That made the harshness go away, so I could tell it was the room. We now have a lovely display of strategically placed pillows. Also found that, with the listening couch against the back wall, reflections off that wall were harmful. Pillows again. |
Why is everyone skipping over this is a dipole 1 foot away from the wall behind them? I dont care how long you burn them in, what treatment you use, the cables, the preamp- NOTHING will fix that "dipole close to the wall behind them" problem. If the dealer told you this would work, definitely return them and say it was terrible advice. Don’t shop there anymore if they really said that. If you wanted it and they said nothing because you were determined, I’d give them the benefit they didnt understand your room conditions. But if you explained this room in detail and they understood you were seting them up 1 foot away from a wall behind them, they shoudl never be trusted again. If they try to sell you something else to "fix" it, just run the other direction. This problem is super simple audio 101. Dipoles are advanced math products that require a good understanding of acoustics to properly set up. Otherwise you need pure luck or a deaf client. To test what I am saying, try a little demo of your own. Divide your room in thirds wall to wall. Pull the speakers out to the first (third) point, dont change the distance to the side walls from where they are now. Then put a listening chair at the next third point. Now the room is divided into three, the speakers and the listening position split the room into three parts. NOW listen- completely different right? This is how you know for sure its the room and speaker position. If the room is also highly reflective (hard surfaces everywhere, no absorption), it will make the problem worse and changing the speaker position will have have less of benefit. Dipoles in highly reflective rooms is acoustically a no no unless you have a acoustic consultant figuring it out and building the room specific to a dipole. Dipoles can sound good in large rooms that are not highly eflective. |
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