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You can do a bit of compensation by changing the axis or toe in. Try to rotate the dominant speaker more toward the center and the other with little or no rotation toward the center.
Each speaker has a resistor pad for its horn, and I've lowered the output of the left speaker/boosted the right speaker, but that's not an ideal solution.
I had the same issue a few years ago. I switched preamps and the problem went away immediately.
My listening room is about 18 x 12 feet with a sloping ceiling that goes from 10 to 18 feet. The speakers are under the higher ceiling side and fire across the narrow side of the room at one end. My speakers are 8 feet apart and about the same distance from my listening position. The left speaker is near a corner, hence its output is reinforced. My NAD C 162 preamp has a balance control and I was turning the balance knob to about 2-3 o'clock, which worked well enough. But the right channel of the preamp recently developed intermittent dropouts, so I replaced it with my 47 Labs 0447, which is a hair shirt passive pre with no provisions for balance control (my amp is a Classe CA-100).The speakers are two-ways, Barzilay cabs with Tru-Sonic 15" woofers, and Radian 450-PB 8-ohm compression drivers, which sit atop the cabinets and are bolted to Altec 811B 8-cell horns. Crossovers are Ewave-based. Each speaker has a resistor pad for its horn, and I've lowered the output of the left speaker/boosted the right speaker, but that's not an ideal solution. The pads don't control the woofers, and using them merely ameliorates the problem, doesn't solve it.I can't move the speakers more than a few feet, so moving them won't help much. I guess my options are to insert an inline RCA attenuator to the left channel--perhaps 3 dB?--between the preamp/amp? Or I can wire a resistor in parallel to the right channel of the volume control of the preamp (thus lowering the total resistance)? Any other ideas short of psychotherapy or meds?