soundreflections
New member
Hi,
I have happily been confirmed as human on the 2nd attempt, though using an explanetory email in between.
I have just got a set of Sequel II's, which is the most revealing speakers I have ever heard!
I have found though that one speaker (R in my case) is "duller" than the other. My first action was to bypass the crossover and run full active, as I bi-amp anyway, whith a processor. That brought the speaker back in line.
I then found there is something lacking in their performance, so running my mid-sweeping EQ (I use a 24ch mixing desk as pre-amp) I found that a slight boost arround 3-400Hz improves thbings no end. I then changed my crosover point from stock 250Hz to 300Hz, which made a great improvement.
I have now bypassed speaker 2, (L in my case) as well and crossing at 300Hz, now L is again most prominent, with R getting 3-6dB more than L, for an almost similar responce. I am yet to figure out where the problem lies, though I will soon build a voltage divider to check the HT on both, to see if ther either is higher voltage, as that is the only thing I can think of, but I have not found the schematic of the HT yet, or something else is wrong.
I am feeding them with a 4 ch, 300W/Ch amp.
Regards,
Peet
I have happily been confirmed as human on the 2nd attempt, though using an explanetory email in between.
I have just got a set of Sequel II's, which is the most revealing speakers I have ever heard!
I have found though that one speaker (R in my case) is "duller" than the other. My first action was to bypass the crossover and run full active, as I bi-amp anyway, whith a processor. That brought the speaker back in line.
I then found there is something lacking in their performance, so running my mid-sweeping EQ (I use a 24ch mixing desk as pre-amp) I found that a slight boost arround 3-400Hz improves thbings no end. I then changed my crosover point from stock 250Hz to 300Hz, which made a great improvement.
I have now bypassed speaker 2, (L in my case) as well and crossing at 300Hz, now L is again most prominent, with R getting 3-6dB more than L, for an almost similar responce. I am yet to figure out where the problem lies, though I will soon build a voltage divider to check the HT on both, to see if ther either is higher voltage, as that is the only thing I can think of, but I have not found the schematic of the HT yet, or something else is wrong.
I am feeding them with a 4 ch, 300W/Ch amp.
Regards,
Peet
Last edited by a moderator: