What is wrong with my system?


Hi everyone -

I’m posting here because individually I think my components are all good, but together my system is not making music, rather is is making bright bass less noise. Honestly, I’m thinking it’s no one component, but the matching of components that is causing this issue. I would like to get everyone’s opinion as to what I’m hearing. My components are as follows:

B&W 802D (first generation diamond)
Audioquest bi-wired Indigo speaker cables

Classe CAM-200 monoblock amplifiers
Audioquest Water XLR interconnect

Bryston BP26 preamp
Audioquest Water XLR interconnect

Mark Levinson 5100 cd player (PCM slow minimum phase)

thanks in advance.

Mark Levinson 5100 CD player


onehorsepony
+1 pgaulke60! My apologies - I missed seeing your post! You at least understand the importance of room placement! 
-1 thyce! The farther a woofer is from the wall/floor boundary the worse it's response. This can be verified by measurements. Changing the crossover caps is a futile and money-wasting endeavor! 
Work with what you have before exploring equipment changes. Check speaker connections to make sure that the speakers are in phase. Try different speaker positions... closer to the wall for more bass.
I’m not a fan of b and w but they are competent in design and manufacturing.  Classe amps are more than adequate to deliver drive any speaker even with a demanding resistance and phase angle. A Bryston preamp is a neutral device that will drive any amp without coloring the sound, and certainly would not suppress the bass.
I agree with placing the speakers closer to the back wall for reinforcement.  My suggestion is front end.  Perhaps a denefrips aeras or audio gd r1 and use downloaded files via usb or a streaming service.  These r to r dacs have an organic quality that many find closer to analog sources.  To quote mr Atkinson. The future of audio is digital, it just won’t be spinning disks 
Many great suggestions here. I agree with trying 'no cost' or the cheapest changes first like room placement, etc. As for cables (which could be the issue), check out the Cable Company (www.thecableco.com). They have a lending library where you can audition cables then return the ones you don't want. That's a good way to experiment with other cable brands. And definitely check cable placement--I accidentally crossed speaker cables once and the sound was really weird. Once I double checked all the connections---voila! Everything was right again. Good luck and let us know what you end up doing.