@ghasley
Ok, I will try that out when I get the putty in.
Correct, one speaker has the amp, the other is passive. The vibration also occurs on the passive, but very minimal.
I have the volume on the speaker set to 2/3s and half-way on the subwoofer. I control the volume through Windows. Since I am going through the Audioquest Dragonfly Cobalt, it is also amplifying the signal, which could account for additional loudness. The thing that does impress me the most about these speakers is their ability to resolve detailed and heavy sound at high volumes. All other speakers I have ever owned or listened to had a peak point where they would distort at that volume. These speakers can cross over that and keep going O_O. No, I don't casually listen at those volumes. If max volume (100) is unbearable, I listen at level 30 max and it's plenty loud. If the track was recorded at low volume, I have increased to level 60 before, but never any higher.
I might also add that I have $4000+ in cables and power equipment behind these.
Ok, I will try that out when I get the putty in.
Correct, one speaker has the amp, the other is passive. The vibration also occurs on the passive, but very minimal.
I have the volume on the speaker set to 2/3s and half-way on the subwoofer. I control the volume through Windows. Since I am going through the Audioquest Dragonfly Cobalt, it is also amplifying the signal, which could account for additional loudness. The thing that does impress me the most about these speakers is their ability to resolve detailed and heavy sound at high volumes. All other speakers I have ever owned or listened to had a peak point where they would distort at that volume. These speakers can cross over that and keep going O_O. No, I don't casually listen at those volumes. If max volume (100) is unbearable, I listen at level 30 max and it's plenty loud. If the track was recorded at low volume, I have increased to level 60 before, but never any higher.
I might also add that I have $4000+ in cables and power equipment behind these.