Nilthepill,
What are you using to drive the Dunlavys?
The change from biwiring is equivalent to a few microhenries, a few pico-farads and a few milli-ohms difference compared to single set of regular cables and binding post jumpers being in the circuit. Given typical speaker X-over networks we are talking differences of less than 1% in equivalent circuits.
To most SS amplifiers this should be no sweat. Such a small difference in X-over might affect a narrow range of frequencies at the xover but why such a big difference in bass, as you report?
Perhaps something else is going on that you have not accounted for...some kind of resonance or ringing between bass driver and amplifier that is tempered with this small change?
(Further food for thought; John Dunlavy was outspoken that he did not believe in large audihble differences.)
What are you using to drive the Dunlavys?
The change from biwiring is equivalent to a few microhenries, a few pico-farads and a few milli-ohms difference compared to single set of regular cables and binding post jumpers being in the circuit. Given typical speaker X-over networks we are talking differences of less than 1% in equivalent circuits.
To most SS amplifiers this should be no sweat. Such a small difference in X-over might affect a narrow range of frequencies at the xover but why such a big difference in bass, as you report?
Perhaps something else is going on that you have not accounted for...some kind of resonance or ringing between bass driver and amplifier that is tempered with this small change?
(Further food for thought; John Dunlavy was outspoken that he did not believe in large audihble differences.)