Where the heck is George at?
You use a single amp and it works with a little less bass. "lack of bass and tightness". NOT no bass. If all the drivers are working and you run the XO in parallel, the reading will go LOWER not higher. Parallel a pair of 8 ohm speakers you get 4 ohms.
Put your DMM on the post that reads ZERO and leave it there for a a while. You have to charge the cap (s) with YOUR little battery in the DMM, do you understand? A lot more caps in the band pass than the BASS OX.
On the bass side there is usually just a low pass, a resistor for 6 db first order maybe a cap TOO, for a second order 12db..
Get some correct data FIRST then figure out what up.. I’m not 100% sure until I know what the mids and highs read on a DMM.
Going from bi-amping to bi-wiring and a single amp tells me there is an AMP problem or the way it’s being wired. A stray single strand or some weird thing like that.. A close look and make sure there is no stray wires touching and you somehow make that happen when you hook that amp back in. You don’t want a strand from one amp touching another.
IF the same speaker cables are being used and you're just adding or removing an amp, it sure sounds like an amp issue to me.
Less swapping a PC for the one that keeps taking a dump.. You did swap PC right? What else is there?
Check the RCAs and XLRs cables for the amp that is acting up. Just swap the silly things.. make sure.
Regards
You use a single amp and it works with a little less bass. "lack of bass and tightness". NOT no bass. If all the drivers are working and you run the XO in parallel, the reading will go LOWER not higher. Parallel a pair of 8 ohm speakers you get 4 ohms.
Put your DMM on the post that reads ZERO and leave it there for a a while. You have to charge the cap (s) with YOUR little battery in the DMM, do you understand? A lot more caps in the band pass than the BASS OX.
On the bass side there is usually just a low pass, a resistor for 6 db first order maybe a cap TOO, for a second order 12db..
Get some correct data FIRST then figure out what up.. I’m not 100% sure until I know what the mids and highs read on a DMM.
Going from bi-amping to bi-wiring and a single amp tells me there is an AMP problem or the way it’s being wired. A stray single strand or some weird thing like that.. A close look and make sure there is no stray wires touching and you somehow make that happen when you hook that amp back in. You don’t want a strand from one amp touching another.
IF the same speaker cables are being used and you're just adding or removing an amp, it sure sounds like an amp issue to me.
Less swapping a PC for the one that keeps taking a dump.. You did swap PC right? What else is there?
Check the RCAs and XLRs cables for the amp that is acting up. Just swap the silly things.. make sure.
Regards