Dchazen, "bass" is something a CLS just won't do no matter what amp you use, tube, SS, ML, ARC, Pass, BAT, Mac. Its bass response starts to fall off at around 60 - 70Hz and is down by half at 40Hz and completely gone by 30Hz. So when you say "I tried a pair of 200W ARC monoblocks on my CLS and found the bass to be ill-defined." I'm thinking, "compared to what?" Unless you listen to a lot of solo guitar, small jazz combos, or string quartets, you won't get all the bass that's on the recording. That said, a very small boost starting at 35Hz is all that's necessary to turn it into a full range speaker; and the ML Depth is just the ticket!
The "quality" of the bass the CLS produces is another matter. You can't imagine how well a CLS can do what bass it does do (cleaner, not louder), until you get it up off the floor on stands -- I received a directive from ML regarding just that early on; stands also improve the soundstage by eliminating the 'floor reflection' off the bottom of the panel.
The ML 23.5 is probably, (along with the ML 20.6,) the closest anyone has come to the sound of a thermionic valve using solid state switching; though I must admit, I haven't heard the latest darTZeel or Boulder or Lamm ;-) I used my 23.5 for driving Wilson Puppies as subs in 1992 because they were the only low frequency speakers that had transient response fast enough to match an electrostat (did you read my system page?). I did compare it directly with the MC275 and the tube amp was superior in midrange detail, separation of instruments, air/hall ambience. Doing some tube rolling brought back the high frequency extension of a SS amp but without any glare or harshness.
For bass boost, you only need one Depth (or Descent, although I prefer the Depth for its transient quickness) It should be placed smack between the panels and set to 90 degree phase angle (the phase that exists halfway between the front and back of the panels ;-) and crossed over (rolled off) starting at 35Hz. You won't need a lot of volume - just enough so you notice if you suddenly turn the sub off. Do not low-pass the CLS! Run it full range and just let it naturally run out of gas on the low end ;-)
The "quality" of the bass the CLS produces is another matter. You can't imagine how well a CLS can do what bass it does do (cleaner, not louder), until you get it up off the floor on stands -- I received a directive from ML regarding just that early on; stands also improve the soundstage by eliminating the 'floor reflection' off the bottom of the panel.
The ML 23.5 is probably, (along with the ML 20.6,) the closest anyone has come to the sound of a thermionic valve using solid state switching; though I must admit, I haven't heard the latest darTZeel or Boulder or Lamm ;-) I used my 23.5 for driving Wilson Puppies as subs in 1992 because they were the only low frequency speakers that had transient response fast enough to match an electrostat (did you read my system page?). I did compare it directly with the MC275 and the tube amp was superior in midrange detail, separation of instruments, air/hall ambience. Doing some tube rolling brought back the high frequency extension of a SS amp but without any glare or harshness.
For bass boost, you only need one Depth (or Descent, although I prefer the Depth for its transient quickness) It should be placed smack between the panels and set to 90 degree phase angle (the phase that exists halfway between the front and back of the panels ;-) and crossed over (rolled off) starting at 35Hz. You won't need a lot of volume - just enough so you notice if you suddenly turn the sub off. Do not low-pass the CLS! Run it full range and just let it naturally run out of gas on the low end ;-)