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Thanks. So far I am having trouble noticing the changes when removing putty but I can definately hear that the midrange is kinda grainy like an old 78 record. I will experiment some more when I get a free day....
So, you like the Bryston? The SP1.7 is on my short list to replace the Outlaw (some of the design "features" are a little weird though). Supposed to be very, very musical. Never had the chance to listen to one in person. Unfortunately, my recent spat of upgrading has hit a stall, something about the wife wanting to rebuild the garage in the spring, blah blah blah...
The bass is fine, its the mids/treble that I am struggling with. George called last night and he was quite encouraging.
Andrikos - What I am trying to measure is the polarity of the amp output, not the speaker (which is well marked). I am concerned that one of my amps may reverse the polarity of the speaker output leaving me with an out of phase set up. I have tried reversing the polarity of the speaker leads on one amp, and it sounded much worse, so I am confident that I have it correct, but I would like to get an undisputable reading on this. ...
Use a continuous tone test CD. Take your voltmeter (on AC volts setting) and measure between the two positive inputs at the speaker. Then, without changing anything, measure from one postive post to the other negative post from the other amp. When you are in phase, this latter measurement should be MUCH larger. In fact, you can use this method to adjust your amps (if they have adjustable gain) to exactly the same gain by trying to get the same output level from both amps.