I conferred with CJ was told that phase inversion is necessary; it’s the configuration I’ve been running though - check.
Connections are secure – check.
***Speaker
cable length….hmmm, maybe a bit of a problem here. For aesthetic
purposes (again, this is my living room and not my hi-fi room) my
electronics are on one side of the room and the speakers centered in the
room. Because of this arrangement, I’ve got two 20’ bi-wire runs of Van
den Hul Teatrack hybrid cabling. Kensington SE’s are 8 ohms.
Atmasphere: Think I’m losing much here?***
To answer the question- yes. Not only are you loosing bass impact, you are loosing resolution. You'll find it easier to make out vocals if you can shorten up the speaker cables.
(this BTW is why balanced interconnect cables are so handy in a home environment as they can be run very long distances without degradation, allowing for short speaker cables; a topic for a different thread)
However, I was not talking about absolute phase with my phase comment. Phase inversion is something an amplifier might do (our amps are non-phase-inverting) but its possible to hook one amp in phase and the other out of phase by accidentally getting one speaker cable hooked up wrong.
When this happens the woofers are fighting each other- you get cancellation in the bass frequencies and so no bass impact. That is why I suggested changing the phase (reversing red for black) on **one speaker only** to test to see if this is the case. Since you have not done so, I suggest you try it and see what difference you hear!