I replied to your email off line, but here are a couple of more thoughts.
I'm not familiar with the other specific pieces of equipment you have. Any chance there is an active subwoofer setting that may have been accidentally turned on?
Also, make yourself a CD with some low frequency test tones, say at 50 Hz, 75 and 100. These shouldn't be hard to find (or generate yourself. I have Adobe Audition which will generate test tones and lots of other audio software programs will do the same.) Having a pure test tone to work with can help you isolate the problem more easily than using music.
Try the tones on the speakers one at a time. It could be there is a problem with only one speaker. If the bass from both seems fine when played separately, that would suggest one of the speaker wires is hooked up out of phase.
I'm not familiar with the other specific pieces of equipment you have. Any chance there is an active subwoofer setting that may have been accidentally turned on?
Also, make yourself a CD with some low frequency test tones, say at 50 Hz, 75 and 100. These shouldn't be hard to find (or generate yourself. I have Adobe Audition which will generate test tones and lots of other audio software programs will do the same.) Having a pure test tone to work with can help you isolate the problem more easily than using music.
Try the tones on the speakers one at a time. It could be there is a problem with only one speaker. If the bass from both seems fine when played separately, that would suggest one of the speaker wires is hooked up out of phase.