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I remember a few years back when I returned to to Maggie sound with the MMG’s, I was in a similar situation that you are right now. The MMG’s sounded bright to say the least. I tried the supplied resistors but I didn’t likethe way they sounded with them.. I turned to the Audio Circle forum members and got some helpful advice. First, those speakers need time to break in, I found the sound does change after a few months.. While the speakers were breaking in, I tried many positions in my room until I nailed it.. The end result was I got 80% of the way there but wanted to refine the sound some more. I decide with the help of A/C member once again that I wanted separate electronics like I had back in the day with my MGllb’s. I went with a tube preamp and solid state amps.. I was blown away.. I would say if you like the Maggie sound, give it a little time and effort and you will be rewarded like I was… besides…that’s what this hobby is all about.. If a simpleton like me can do it, anyone can.Regards,Jerry
I think there have been some good suggestions for making incremental improvements but none of them are going to turn a Sonos or an Oppo into a good source component. The fact that only "well recorded" recordings sound acceptable while most others are kind of irritating is a very good indication that your source component is the root of the problem. A good source component should make 99% of your music enjoyable to listen to even though you can easily distinguish the outstanding recordings from the merely average.The importance of the source component seems to be a concept that is lost at Audio Circle and the Internet in general.
I think there have been some good suggestions for making incremental improvements but none of them are going to turn a Sonos or an Oppo into a good source component. The fact that only "well recorded" recordings sound acceptable while most others are kind of irritating is a very good indication that your source component is the root of the problem. A good source component should make 99% of your music enjoyable to listen to even though you can easily distinguish the outstanding recordings from the merely average.
Well, there is the possibility that Dave just doesn't like the sound of these speakers and no amount of musical chairing with other equipment will alleviate the issue. If you have the wrong set of tires on your car....changing the oil or gasoline octane or moving the seat forward is not going to fix the issue. The obvious solution to the problem.....which no one has mentioned yet....is to alter the crossover. The change to a series crossover on the newer models tends to force a midrange bump into the speakers because of the interaction that didn't exist with the previous (parallel) crossovers. Unfortunately, the tight-lipped folks at Magnepan have chosen to keep all the new crossovers a big secret so we can't easily simulate them and make relative adjustments for cases like this.Dave.
Stick a cheap tube buffer into the mix with that Oppo or Sonus or whatever - it'll work magic on the sound.I was given a Yaqiun and with some vintage Sylvania tubes it transformed the wife's system; CDs went from dead and crappy, flat, lifeless and even blah to if only it had 3.7 ribbons we'd really have something here...
My use of Sonos is as a pure digital pass through.
mndave007,I just recalled you have one tube in the signal chain.What tube is it? That could be your problem right there and it would take only a second to fix it.
Steve, I believe all PT gear use the Russian 6N1P tube. There really aren't any tubes that you can roll. I had gear that used this tube. The NOS and New tubes of the 6N1P variety sound the same. They are all made in the Russian Voskhod plant. They use it because it is durable. It really is not a great sounding tube and was a poor choice by PT. They should have used a 6DJ8 or 6922 where there are more options and more musical and warmer sounding tubes.