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Vern,How often do you get up to the Raleigh area? Where exactly in Charlotte are you?How bound are you to the Paradigms? I can almost guanantee you what you are hearing is partly your room and partly the Paradigm speakers themselves..... combined with the fact that the rest of your system isn't compensating for the room/speaker issues.If you are sticking with the speakers, some room treatments will definitely help in your space. I'd start there. Depending on how extensive you go, that's still not going to fix the speaker issue. You can work with it and match the components a bit better. The recommendations of a tube amp or hybrid are definitely noteworthy. I have a few customers in the Charlotte area that have Butler amps. You might be able to hook up with them and give one a try... One definite way to alleviate some of what you're hearing is to employ some room correction and tame the peaks... but you have to figure out exactly where they are first.Your room is surprisingly similar to several of the "theater rooms" I've put in recently and the audio has been the issue given the aesthetic the owner was going for and unwilling to employ room treatments/room correction or use components that worked together well given the room limitations. Lately I've been sneaking basic room correction into people's systems by only selling the Denon line of receivers with the Audyssey system or FIR-filter based "correction". It's given great results thus far.... that and I don't sell anything as hot sounding as the Paradigm stuff. I love the company. But the speakers have gotten progressively brighter sounding with each iteration since coming on the scene 15 years ago or so....
I still think the midrange is more the issue.....its not the high end sizzle normally associated with a tweeter that is troubling, its the piercing vocals (especially female).
Also, the Soliloquy 5.3 can be found used for ~$700. 35Hz-20Khz.With the Tylers, you can try them in your home basically for the cost of shipping. With the Soliloquy, you can likely resell them for what you paid.Worth a shot...and you're not really "giving up" on the 100s...just temporarily experimenting with alternatives.
My experience with mid range brightness was solved ( mostly) with room treatments.I use a pair of RF7 Klipsch, well known for their brightness, for HT and MCH . What I discovered - after being told as much by several pple - was that in the untreated room I was forced to listen at a higher SPL to get "everything" out of the music. The bass and mid bass was over emphasized which forced me to up the volume to hear the rest of the FR.Once I treated the room - 10 Real Traps - I was able to lower the volume and get the full FR at my listening position. I was also able to change speaker position to get the best imaging without focusing exclusively on the heavy bass issues. I also upgraded the crossovers but this was just fine tuning, the treatments really did the trick.No matter what you decide re speakers, you will want to treat that room.
Vern...You've recieved quite a bit of advice on this and I'm weighing in a bit late, but wanted to make a comment or two because I struggle with the same issues after going from ACI Jaguar 2000's to Sonus Faber Grand piano's. The GP's are far more revealing...which with good recordings is wonderful, but it makes some older recordings...especially rock, very hard to listen to. I've found a couple of things:1. I have caught myself listening louder than I often do due to the ability to hear into the soundstage better. I catch myself turning it up. Reducing the volume even a little will help quite a bit at times. The fact that you like the bass with your current system doesn't help because it's tempting to really enjoy the 'slam' those Paradigms can deliver.2. While your 100v3's would never be called laid back, they are quite a bit smoother than earlier iterations. You might find that moving them forward a bit more and covering the big screen when listening to 2 channel will help as well.3. If you start changing equipment...you may want to consider trying the SAS 10a preamp. While very transparent and detailed...it just never gets in your face. It also has a switch on the back that allows you to tailor the midrange slightly. The only caveat is that this is a dual mono unit and has two volume pots. If remote control is important to you...this won't work for you.peace,Bob