PROAC D48R Bass Booming


Dear all,  I have just bought a pair of preowned Proac D48R speakers.  I really love these speakers very much.  But the only problem is Bass-boom and because of that, some tracks are unlistenable.  My room is 17 L, 11 W and 10 W.  My source is Ayre CX7EMP and I'm having a Balanced Audio Technology VK3000 SE HYBRID INTEGRATED Amplifier.  Please let me know whether I can solve this problem.  I there any benefit,  if I change my amp and replace it with a Cary Audio SLI100 Tube Integrated amplifier.    Thanks in advance.
gnanasekhar
@gnanasekhar, the  Proac D48R are perfectly fine Loudspeakers!
Do not let these slip away over placement issue.
Try spacing even closer together and changing the distance back and forward from the wall.
All you need to do is position for better integration in the listening space.
Also contact Proac Support by email and find out if any advise is applicable for you.
OP: If you plan to keep these speakers, Find a competent tech and have them add a volume control to the woofer circuit. They could hang the control from a wire so it comes out the bottom (where the bass comes out) so you wouldn't have to damage the cabinet. Problem solved.
@rego,I agree. And that is what I am suggesting. Placed along the 17' wall, he can try to move the speakers at least 4.5' from the side walls. That leaves 8' between the speakers which is ample for a room his size.

Is it really the case where the speakers sound great with most recordings, but is too boomy for some?  Could it be that it is still a bit boomy with most recordings, but not so troublesome?  I ask because any sort of permanent fix to reduce the booming will also affect the sound with recordings that you are not troubled by.  It might be the case that an equalizer will be the best approach for you--you can then do recording-specific adjustments.

It may also be the case that a set of subwoofers will work.  You can adjust the crossover frequency and thereby cut the levels of bass coming from the ProAcs and then adjust the bass from the subwoofers to your liking.

In any case, your approach of doing more experiments with placement will always be the best first step.  But, do not assume that farther from the back or side walls will always reduce the booming bass.  There could be points that are actually near the walls that will do the trick; it is a matter of finding points that reduce reinforcing nodes and cancelling nodes.  I also generally like bass traps in room corners.