Bass leaves after amp warms up?


I don't understand-after my Musical Fidelity M6i amp warms up for about an hour I notice the deep bass & kick drum aren't the same.
They sound less musical with loss of weight/depth.The notes are there but the moving of air have left.Sound is has much less impact and boreing.
I had the same problem with Bryston amp so there is no defect with amps nor with the rest of my equipment/
PSB Synchrony one speakers,AQ cables,Bryston CD Player.
My question has anyone heard similar & is there a plausable reason?
fishing716
Atmasphere I tried your suggestion of turning off the amp when the sound changes and my first try was successful!
I only waited 10 minutes and returned but the bass was back in full bloom.
I don't know how long it will last but will explore this development till I discern a pattern.
Something must be overheating?
Fishing, I can feel your frustration, but IMO nothing can be done w/o measuring the SPL. Wait for your friend to measure and then we'll have a more definitive diagnosis. (Underpowered amp as many of us believe). OK, my last post.
Fishing716 -

A couple of suggestions.
What I have found with some mosfet amps is they go through cycles. On turn on, very transparent, then after a while they go gluggy. However if you wait another hour then the transparency returns.
The other suggestion would be to get the amplifer checked over - get the "bias" checked to make sure it is in spec. The bias will determine the operating temperature to some degree and too high a bias can result in "gluggy" sound.
Just re read all of the Fishing716 posts to find a pattern. Please correct me if I am wrong but it seems that there is rarely a time that the bass sounds bad when first turning the system on for that day and also you have had marginal success by often fiddling with the cables. You also have mentioned that the bass leaves quickest with video sources.

Another "grasping at straws" would be to dermine if something in your speakers are getting so warm that the "Q" of the speaker increases enough that the bass no longer has punch, impact or definition to it. You could try losely filling your ports with spongy foam before you turn on your system to see if you can recreate the "flat" bass sound for us. It does not hurt anything to try.

Yet another "grasp" would be some kind of capacitance build up in your cables that can be dissipated with enough fooling with them, not that I know how that could happen.

I know that these are some pretty out there ideas but it is all I could come up with as the other posters have done an excellent job of covering the subject.