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Here’s my story, I owned a Musical Fidelity A5 Integrated Amp and bought the Magnepan MMG’s. The speakers sounded bright from the word go, up until the time I got a Prima Luna tube preamp and Bel Canto amps.My former speakers, the Von Schweikert VR-1’s didn’t sound bright at all.I tried much of what other A/C members mentioned above, to no avail. The only thing I haven’t tried at this time is room treatments but I didn’t have them to begin with.Regards,Jerry
MMG's are good speakers, but just don't have enough surface area to represent bass well. That said, you will need a sub, preferably 2 to get them humping. Jim
Happy New Year everyone.I'm running a pair of Acoustic Zen Adagios from a Marantz 7001 AVR through Audio Art SC-5SE cables. I like detail, which the combination can provide. However, regardless of the source, the treble always sounds too harsh to me, leading to fatigue. As this is a duel use setup, both home theater and 2-channel audio, I'm not giving up on the receiver, but I've read good things about these speakers and tubes. Unfortunately, I've also read that the speakers blossom with power. I'm a tube virgin and am wondering what those with experience think of introducing a hybrid such as the Vincent SP-331 to the mix. I'd go full tube too, if enough power and musical detail are available for the right price. My budget is limited, needing to stay under $1,000, but I'm comfortable going used.Thanks for the help.Aron
I happen to like the way the MMG's sound without a sub, I'm actually getting solid (not humping)bass out of them right now and the high's are smooth. I would go with the 1.7's before I get a subor two.
Has anything worked yet?
The old speakers were never run with decent cable, so I may just have never been able to notice the problem. I used to run generic Radio Shack wire, so the change to that of Audio Art was a big one. It could certainly be that the cable is the culprit.
I made some speaker wire out of mil spec silver plated copper in a star quad, it was not bright sounding...
Try aiming the speakers further inward too, so the tweeters cross a few feet in front of your lap.
What I personally like for most speakers is to point the speakers right at you and then keep toeing them out to shoot past your head. Usually about 15-20 degrees of toe out works best if system is setup in an equilateral triangle.
On your solid state receiver with an iPod as a source?
Hey bubba, it might be yopur room, do you have lots of hard surface reflections?
all it took was 13 posts till someone suggested the obvious !