@donquichotte ahh ok, That is completely different setup and use case I guess. My system us purely HT, 0 music and multichannel vs stereo. I hope your experience will not translate 1:1 to my.
Thank you for getting back to me on it.
Anthem ARC and Subwoofers - A quick review
For a while now I’ve been saying that a good room correction system was the best choice for most music lovers looking to integrate a subwoofer. Getting a subwoofer to sound glorious is hard work and ARC systems like the Anthem Genesis system promises to fix.
I’ve recently gotten to use an Anthem MRX 540 and evaluated it’s performance. To make a long story short it does a lot of things right, and stops juuuuuust short of doing great.
Like many ARC systems before it, Genesis leaves your system sounding too bright and lean. Not enough bass and too much treble. Here’s the good news: These issues are relatively easy to overcome and what it does right is the hard part:
The overall process to getting great sound with Genesis is the following:
I’ve written about the technical steps in detail here:
@donquichotte ahh ok, That is completely different setup and use case I guess. My system us purely HT, 0 music and multichannel vs stereo. I hope your experience will not translate 1:1 to my. Thank you for getting back to me on it. |
I should update this. While I could get the Anthem ARC to work, what I can’t get it to do is use Dolby Surround correctly, and I cannot set my own parametric EQ settings. It also seems to have trouble synching with my LG television, requiring several power cycles to get Atmos working correctly via streaming. Also, it seems to get too hot and the Roku signal starts flickering. My recommendation has therefore shifted to the Marantz units with advanced Audyssey capabilities. |
@erik_squires What make and model subwoofer are you using? How did you determine its position in your room? |