Low bass level when your are playing music at low levels is a function of the ear/brain interconnect. The bass needs to be elevated at low levels to match the "apparent" output of the mids and highs. (The phenom is referred to as the Fletcher Munson Curve.) Thats why receivers etc have bass tone controls - so you can apply your own compensation.
Apart from that, it could be your speakers have inadequate capacity to energize the bass in your room - but we don't know about your room, as you didn't tell us.
One solution is to buy a seperate sub woofer which you can use to supplement the bass, using it at a slightly higher level than the main system, or you can buy an equalizer and install it in your tape loop and use it only when you want the additional bass from your speakers.
Changing the gain to your preamp will do nothing to alter the problem.
Apart from that, it could be your speakers have inadequate capacity to energize the bass in your room - but we don't know about your room, as you didn't tell us.
One solution is to buy a seperate sub woofer which you can use to supplement the bass, using it at a slightly higher level than the main system, or you can buy an equalizer and install it in your tape loop and use it only when you want the additional bass from your speakers.
Changing the gain to your preamp will do nothing to alter the problem.