Bad Cornwall IV?


Hi guys. I finally upgraded my decades old receiver to an Anthem MRX-1140 to compliment my Cornwall IVs that I bought a few months ago. While running through the room correction ARC software the right front speaker sounds very different from the left and center (all Cornwall IVs). Can someone look at this graph and let me know if the speaker is bad or what the problem could be?

 

ARC Graph

 

Thanks in advance!

starbuck02

In 2022 all the money nerds are trying anyway possible to maximize profit margins even if it means a degrade in performance. It’s always been that way to an extent but the engineers had more power in earlier years. I don’t know about the Cornwalls but speakers that cost multiples of a thousand dollars should be using at least mid grade audiophile components. Would probably only add 50 bucks to the speaker unless going crazy. I don’t wanna buy something for 5-10k and need to worry about upgrading it. Ridiculous! Rant over..

Those slate colored things, on the outside of the binding posts, are called "jumpers" they allow you to use a single speaker wire to feed your speaker. When you remove the jumpers, you can use two speaker wires (bi-wire) which people say sounds better.

Note: the binding posts, at least on my Forte 4s, do not allow extreme tightening with spade terminals. You must use banana plugs or your contact is compromised.

Glad to hear you solved your problem!

@mofojo 

I think it’s a Klispch thing. I know another person with new Cornwall’s and a couple with Heresy IV’s that have had issues with the binding posts. Mostly coming loose on the outside and once on the inside.

I have Klipsch Heresy IVs bought new from Upscale a year or so ago and the binding posts are picky!! I had no sound from one speaker, blamed my amp, fiddled and futzed and discovered it was the spade speaker connectors. Switched to bananas via those Audioquest converter plug things and no more problems. I had been about to ship my amp off for service, glad I kept futzing.