Here's a simple un-tweak that may have helped just a little tweak (pun)... dunno.
For the longest time, I lifted the back of my speakers so they tilted forward. Here the old thought process:
My listening position is below the level of the tweeters. The speakers are about 44 inches high and my listening position is about 10 feet back. But my couch sits very low. I thought that by tilting the speakers forward, the tweeters would beam directly at me and treble would be improved.
Here's my current thinking, courtesy of this thread:
Lifting the back of the speakers as described may have augmented treble response, but the tweeter voice coils are even more forward of the mid and woofer driver voice coils than before the tilt forward. So ... to the extent there was time incoherence before, I'm just augmenting it.
So, at the expense of maybe losing a little treble, I attenuated an already non-optimal time incoherent situation just a tad.
Bottom line: it's probably in my head, but I think the speakers sound a little better. Little less bassey, a tad more coherent and invisible.
Btw, a couple of weeks ago, I switched back to the 4 ohm taps on my amp. There's definitely a noticeable change in coloration because the output impedance off the 4 ohm taps is lower -- and output voltage regulation is tighter. Bass is tighter and more extended. Upper mids/low treble are less bright.
But I also think the amp is "happier" with the load presentation because a good part of the speaker's power delivery demands are in the bass/low midrange region which specs at 4 ohms (70 Hz to 700 Hz). IOW, better impedance matching with the amp where it counts the most.
Still want to check out the DEQX.
Cheers,
BIF
For the longest time, I lifted the back of my speakers so they tilted forward. Here the old thought process:
My listening position is below the level of the tweeters. The speakers are about 44 inches high and my listening position is about 10 feet back. But my couch sits very low. I thought that by tilting the speakers forward, the tweeters would beam directly at me and treble would be improved.
Here's my current thinking, courtesy of this thread:
Lifting the back of the speakers as described may have augmented treble response, but the tweeter voice coils are even more forward of the mid and woofer driver voice coils than before the tilt forward. So ... to the extent there was time incoherence before, I'm just augmenting it.
So, at the expense of maybe losing a little treble, I attenuated an already non-optimal time incoherent situation just a tad.
Bottom line: it's probably in my head, but I think the speakers sound a little better. Little less bassey, a tad more coherent and invisible.
Btw, a couple of weeks ago, I switched back to the 4 ohm taps on my amp. There's definitely a noticeable change in coloration because the output impedance off the 4 ohm taps is lower -- and output voltage regulation is tighter. Bass is tighter and more extended. Upper mids/low treble are less bright.
But I also think the amp is "happier" with the load presentation because a good part of the speaker's power delivery demands are in the bass/low midrange region which specs at 4 ohms (70 Hz to 700 Hz). IOW, better impedance matching with the amp where it counts the most.
Still want to check out the DEQX.
Cheers,
BIF