Help, moved and very unhappy the sound of the syst


In the new room the hole excitment level of the system dissappered. My heart rate no longer races, and I truly miss this. Any ideas would be very helpful.

What I have done,

Current room, 26x14. 9ft ceiling at listing position(back wall) 12 foot ceilings at front. The front of the system is in the middle of the long wall. Glass patio door prevents using the length of the room, due to sunlight on tv.

System-
Myryad MPD 500 pre
Bryston 9b amp
Phase Tech PC 9.1 as mains
Phase Tech PC 3.1 as center/rears
HSU VTF-2 sub

It was suggeste that I try a new sub, so I got a Revel b15. Basically no improvement, just no life to the system. Improvement was less than 5%

So I started plotting everything. Found that I had large dip 12db around 63hz. I am a little confused on how to fix this, with sub or front mains so I started with the front mains. Pulled them out from the wall until I got a good plot from them. About 5 feet from the wall, this room is 14 wide, looks funny. But I live alone so who cares. Got the plots to improve to atleast a +-6db range. The system sounds better, but no where close to before. The previous room was an apartment, much smaller. 16x8x9 or so. I had a large glass fish tank in that room, front of tank was 6x2.

I really just do not know what to do next. The system has no heart racing ability. A larger amp will not do much unless I really go big, Brystons 7bs. Talked to stores, Bryston and Phase Tech. Phase Tech basically said "huh thanks for telling me"

With the speakers way out from the wall the 2ch preformance better. Getting weird reflections I think though.

I ended up using the pre amp crossofer at 80hz having the revel low level crossover set at 40hz, letting the revel take all the real low stuff, using its high pass to send the rest to the Hsu(40-80hz). The system is still missing 75% of the heart jump starting ability.

Thanks for the help.

Marty
marty9876
Thaks for all the help. I switched the placement of the whole system be 90 degrees, to run the length of the room.

Some improvement, but little. The speakers are 5 ft apart, 5ft from side walls and 4ft from back wall. 9ft to listening position. I am starting hear and will see where I get.

The floors are the same, concrete with carpeting. The old place was a brand new apartment unit, 9ft ceilings with flat painted sheetrock. The new room is an older house with painted sheetrock, with some "texture" to it. The room is sunken about 1ft with carpeting around the whole perminter up 1 ft, weird 70's thing?

No change in support of equiment. New seating location is 11 ft from back wall.

The house has a 200 amp service panel, old push-matic circuit breakers. I re-installed a trip-lite rf filter used only on the pre ampo and dvd player.

I am thinking I might have a real dead room, just feels that way. Not sure if this can be overcome...

Thank you all for your help

Marty
Marty:

As the others have already noted, your problem is almost certainly due to room/acoustic problems. Your room is fairly large, asymmetric, and plagued with a wall of glass, so there are a number of factors which may be contributing to your dissatisfaction.

You could spend weeks trying various solutions, but this is one time I'd really suggest spending some money and hire the services of a good home theater guru. Do a little research and find out which store / HT consulting service has a good reputation in your area, and engage their services. My bet is that you won't regret getting some expert help. If the advice you get is too expensive to do everything at once, then tackle the problem incrementally, starting with the changes that will make the most impact.
Marty, your speakers are WAY too close together. You also have them the same distance from two boundaries ( 5 ft to rear wall, 5 ft to side walls ) and that is a no-no. Each distance from the speaker to a wall creates a specific resonance or node. Having the same distance between multiple points of reflection will tend to reinforce those nodes and resonances, making them WAY out of control. At the same time, you're also increasing the amount of cancellation in other frequency ranges.

Take a look at the thread below and see if it helps. If you try all of that and you're still not happy, you might want to contact a professinal acoustician to see what they have to say. I would be VERY leary of most "audio guru's" that work in stereo shops that do HT installations. Many of those that i've seen are acoustic DISASTERS that people paid BIG cash to have installed. Sean
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http://forum.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/fr.pl?cspkr&1021745115&2&3&4&
Thanks all for the help, so far the front mains are 7ft apart and I am moving the speakers forward to work out the bass.

If I end up with something that NO women would ever life with than am I on the right track?(audio side of life only....)

Marty
Marty, I'm sure everyone is trying to be helpful(but probabaly confusing..as they're mostly guessing), but the reality is you should be prepared to do a lot of studying, and a lot of experimenting, trial and error!...and I mean a lot!!!! Or, your best alternative, possibly makes even more sence...PAY SOMEONE WHO KNOW WHAT THEY'RE DOING TO set up your system!!!
There is simply WAY TOO MUCH going on in a given room/system to try to guess, and to think your going to solve your acoustical challanges without a tremendous amountof knowledge, skill and experince! There's really no replacement for these things, and it takes TIME!(and desire).
I have done over 1000 systems in the last 20 years, and can say all this as the gospel truth.
Sometimes people get lucky on their own, but it's rare. When you consider the considerations to be adressed in attaining great(even good) sound, it can be very imposing. Most just settle for mediocrity, or switch gear untill they just give up.
Anyway, if you ever want definitive solutions, try giveing someone who knows what they're doing a call, and be done with it. Otherwise, be prepared to dig in and make it an extended hobby/project.
Good luck