I've lost my bass....


Well, not all of it. My system is:

Arcam CD92
Marantz 2020 (Don Scott modified) Tuner
Conrad Johnson PV14
Conrad Johnson MV60
Audio Physic Virgo III
HT Pro 9 Interconnects
Synergistic Research Sig. 2 Speaker Cables

This is my first tube system and I love it. I had this system in a 15' x 23' room and I thought it was outstanding. Mids and highs were exceptional and bass was firm though clearly not registering the lowest octaves. I was OK with that.

Here's the problem. I needed to put my Home Theater system in the room where the stereo was and put the stereo where the home theater was. The furniture and carpeting was also switched at the same time. Now the stereo is in an "L" shaped room that is bigger than the previous one. As a result, the bass repsonse is not nearly as authoritative as it was in the smaller room (no surprise).

My question is, what can be done to improve bass response? Some issues I've thought of are:

1. Room treatment? What kind?
2. Try different tubes (FYI, MV60 is EL34 based amp)? Any suggestions?
3. Amp is underpowered?

I'm open to any ideas on how to improve bass response.

Thanks to all for any help.
Dave
milo
Do you have the MV60 or MV 60SE? The SE solves the bass problem with the MV60 while giving you more power, bass and speed. The same is true of the PV 14 Series 2. It is well worth the upgrade. Amp stands and room interaction also play a role. I would call CJ and talk to them about your cables. The subwoofer is not a solution. A more efficient or better designed side firing woofer/speaker system is a consideration. I do not think the AP Virgo is the best match for your amps. Keep the amps and change the speakers.
Cellorover, Interestly I think you may have reached the correct conclusion, that he should consider getting new speakers, but for the wrong reason. I suspect the Virgo's are just not capable of energizing the bass in a room as large as the one he now has to use (with any amp!) but personally I see no reason why he should have to find a new speakers and, potentially an amp, when a sub will do. But since you mentioned it, why not elaborate on why a well integrated sub would not work for him and save him the cost and expense of buying new speakers, etc.

Sean, Rsbeck, and others who mentioned the amp - I don't disagree with you in principal, however I didn't see this as a potential solution to what sounded like a substantial loss of bass. Apart from the placement issues I saw a sub as his only viable solution and still be able to keep the Virgos. Recall in his original placement he felt the bass was not outstanding, merely adequate.

Now if his complaint is really just a minor one about bass quality or quantity then the amp becomes a real factor - as I recall the CJ is not an earthshaking bass amp, either in quality or quantity. Perhaps he should get a RS sound meter and a test disc and measure the bass response at the various listening positions and see how far off flat his bass is, and what frequencies need boosting, before he embarks on any revisions. Perhaps he just has overambitious expectations re bass. Perhaps further feed back from the poster would help him get some more specific recommendations.
My suspicion is that if the amp is not producing bass in these speakers, getting speakers with more bass capability will only tax this amp more.
If you want more bass, you need more power. You can add that power
in a couple of different ways. You can trade the low lowered CJ amp for
a higher powered amp, or you can stick with the CJ and add a powered sub, which will come with a built-in high powered solid state amp. If you just want to get the bass response you were previously getting, it is
going to mean tuning the system to the room, finding the right speaker
placement, room treatment, etc. I, personally, wouldn't like having to integrate a Sub-woofer into my music system, so that would be *my* last resort. But, if you are a low power tube fan, I think your options are to give up some bass response, try to maximize it with room tuning, or integrate a sub. No matter what your choice, hiring an acoustic consultant to come over for a few hours could be the best money you ever spent. You'll learn how to place your speakers, the problems inherent in the room, how to get the most out of your system, etc. etc.