I am looking to get more bass out of my system


Hi Guys,

I need advice on how to put a little more bass into my system, only because its my preference. I have a Jolida tubed Cd forking off into 2 integrated tube amps the Jolida JD 502B which powers a pair of Klipsch Chorus II and a Cary SLI 80 powering a pair of Klipsch Chrous I and an additional subwoofer. This system is capable of putting out the bass when the music is called to do so, but often I would like to hear a little more bass in general. There are no bass or treble controls, so what would be the best way to achieve more bass with out sacrificing too much music quality. Thanks for input. Pete
mainsound
A small sub, such as a Velodyne DD10 or a Definitive Tech Supercube III (older model with more connection options). Not too much money and a big boost in bass output. It can take some time to integrate.
The first thing i would try is to run your CD player WITHOUT splitting the signal into two amps. You may surprised that your bass will improve due to the fact you CD's output stage may not have enough horsepower to PROPERLY drive the 2 sets of outputs. The second thing I would try would depend on what tube compiment you are using in your CD player. Let us know the tubes before taking any other measures. What interconnects are you using between the CD and the amp. It could be that you get what you are after without spending a bunch of money.

Good luck.
A musical, fast, self-powered sub-woofer, (say a Rythmik Audio D15SE). Being self-powered, it will have line inputs from your preamp, crossover adjustments and level controls so you can get the bass you want on demand.
I would try and "stack" the 2 pair if Chorus speakers, inverting the top pair,as well as place the sub somewhere in between the stack, trying to keep all the drivers at equal distances from the listening area. IME, this will achieve the "tightest" bass, given your equipment. The bass characteristics of the 2 pair of Chorus differs a bit, as does the 2 amps. I always look for tighter bass, not more bass. One pair of Chorus's should provide enough bass, unless the room is quite large. Just experiment. But, too much bass will "excite" the room, which is no good.
The power cord and cone root sounds like the best advice so far . And you won't be messing with other things . You have likely found the best spot for your speakers , moving them back may give you more bass but usually causes more problems than it solves .