That's the only thing holding me back from the Mini T's: the bass output.
Sounded great in one showroom in Vancouver, not so good at another dealer in the Seattle area.
Too much bass at the latter with two different amps in two different rooms.
My room won't allow me to place them 3 to 4 feet from the wall
the Mini T's' perform remarkable in acoustic suspension mode (sealed box ),
Actualy in one of my setups it turn lately that I prefer using it like so since my BDP-2 joined the setups and brought up dynamics via BNC output to the stratosphere.
someone post a thread regarding the subject of room overloads and
James show us the SPL graphs and assure us it perfectly safe to sealed Bryston speakers.
I tried to give it a real tryout,and nothing (like going the 23db gain) better it so far in this room.
The problem is I always did the A/B sealed vs ported as probably like many other
and fall to the common bias trap : more is better and less is not enough.
Well,It's not really like so when one don't do A/B in direct trial. ( think a bout it audiophiles )
This way after few hours or day or I got to understand that in one of my setups
The "more" was actual too much and less turn out fine and brought more details,nuance and
Less fatigue overall better dry hi fi feel compare to over lush/wet club loudness.
the nice thing about the Mini T's is that they not sound thin or washed out
In this sealed box mode,so it is recommended practice to try.
Itshak