It is not abnormal for one of the drivers in a speaker to "settle in" or alter output and / or frequency response over time. As such, what may have started out as "matched pairs", etc.. of drivers no longer "match". This can result in changes in volume level, imaging, harmonic structure, prat, etc..
Unsound and Flex both offer good ideas. However, I would start off by simply pulling all of your cables ( ONE by ONE ) in the system and simply re-seating them. This is simple and may help solve your problem. This should be done on a somewhat regular basis as "crust" does develop on connections over a relatively short period of time.
If that does not work, i would try swapping speakers from left to right. Obviously, it would help to mark the positioning of both of these prior to shifting them around. If the problem is speaker based, you should hear the channel imbalance with the left side being louder now.
If the right channel remains louder, you either have something wrong upstream in the components or you are experiencing problems with how the room loads up. You would have to do some step by step "detective work" to find out if a component or cable was responsible for this. What you measure under a no load condition ( voltage levels measured at the outputs but with nothing connected to the device ) can be quite different than what takes place under loaded i.e. "connected" conditions. If all of this checks out, you know that the components and speakers are okay and it's time to look at room treatments.
If the problem did shift channels when moving the speakers, you would need to use a test disc with various test tones and an spl meter to see what was going on. Put the system into mono mode and then measure the driver on one speaker at a specific freq and then measure the other. Nearfield measurements taken on axis ( basically directly in front of each driver as close as is reasonably possible ) is the way to go here. Obviously, the placement of the SPL meter should remain as consistent as possible from driver to driver and side to side.
It would not be abnormal to see small variations from side to side due to less than professional testing conditions. However, a very noticeable difference would point to a driver or internal crossover related problem.
Hopefully, this will give you some ideas as to where to go. Let's hope that it is something simple. Sean
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Unsound and Flex both offer good ideas. However, I would start off by simply pulling all of your cables ( ONE by ONE ) in the system and simply re-seating them. This is simple and may help solve your problem. This should be done on a somewhat regular basis as "crust" does develop on connections over a relatively short period of time.
If that does not work, i would try swapping speakers from left to right. Obviously, it would help to mark the positioning of both of these prior to shifting them around. If the problem is speaker based, you should hear the channel imbalance with the left side being louder now.
If the right channel remains louder, you either have something wrong upstream in the components or you are experiencing problems with how the room loads up. You would have to do some step by step "detective work" to find out if a component or cable was responsible for this. What you measure under a no load condition ( voltage levels measured at the outputs but with nothing connected to the device ) can be quite different than what takes place under loaded i.e. "connected" conditions. If all of this checks out, you know that the components and speakers are okay and it's time to look at room treatments.
If the problem did shift channels when moving the speakers, you would need to use a test disc with various test tones and an spl meter to see what was going on. Put the system into mono mode and then measure the driver on one speaker at a specific freq and then measure the other. Nearfield measurements taken on axis ( basically directly in front of each driver as close as is reasonably possible ) is the way to go here. Obviously, the placement of the SPL meter should remain as consistent as possible from driver to driver and side to side.
It would not be abnormal to see small variations from side to side due to less than professional testing conditions. However, a very noticeable difference would point to a driver or internal crossover related problem.
Hopefully, this will give you some ideas as to where to go. Let's hope that it is something simple. Sean
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