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I use an AVA Fet valve 400R amp and an AVA Fet valve preamp with my 1.7s and this combo eliminated all the brightness issues that I had. I don't need the resistors anymore. I get clean life-like sound and fantastic deep bass.
Let me see, I haven't had tone controls since I had Crown equipment back in the seventies. Personally, I would rather have a balance control but these day's I don't even have that..
Unfortunately, "tone controls" developed a stigma through the years....only partially justified. There was a belief by the audiophile that if "I have to use tone controls, there must be something wrong with my system."
Please visit the Magnepan site and read the statement about room size in the FAQ
I disagree that balance controls ever degraded equipment "sound." At least no more than a volume control would. Both of those devices being passive, they were inherently less obtrusive than active devices.
Yes, the 1.7 looks like it would work in my room according to Magnepan but I was looking for first hand experience for my 11X15 room. A few months ago I spoke to someone at Magnepan about it and was told the bass might be a problem, meaning, to much bass for the size of the room.
My room with 1.7s is 13' x 12'. Bass is not too much. I added a subwoofer just for more foundation and ultra low support.
I have 2 A21s with my mmgs.It is a great pairing. Plenty of power and some warmth.I had a Pass labs before and that was a great amp and I highly recommend that brand. For the money the Parasound halo is in the same league as the pass and hard to beat as a value leader. I cant think of a better amp for the money.Also if you have warmth issues you should try the choke tweak. Often that is all that is needed to "warm" up the mags. Rc networks too are a must.
You don't know what you're missing. A proper form of equalization can be an essential tool for taming a multitude of problems in current audio systems.Unfortunately, "tone controls" developed a stigma through the years....only partially justified. There was a belief by the audiophile that if "I have to use tone controls, there must be something wrong with my system."Of course, most everyone is listening to some sort of equalized audio every time they throw a CD in the player. The recording engineers are tinkering with tonal balance constantly. For us, on the playback end of the chain, to assume that no further equalization might be necessary is a bit naive. Everyone's listening environment is different.Cheers,Dave.
Correct so why add EQ on top of EQ, isn't the idea to hear what is in the recordings as neutral as possible , hence the lack of tone controls.Room correction should be done passively IMO ....