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From the picture of the Dealers show room it is self evident why they sounded good, the bass energy was trapped in the room with you so it was possible to get acceptable performance from only two 6.5in. woofers in that room. I don't want to pessimistic here but if you have a conventional wooden frame house with a suspended floor above a basement it is highly unlikely that you will ever achieve the bass performance in your home from these speakers that you heard in the dealer's show room. You are trying to achieve good bass performance below 100Hz with a total cone area equivalent to one 8in. woofer in a nearly 3000 cu.ft. volume. I wouldn't expect two 8in. woofers to do an adequate job under these circumstances. I would be looking at speakers with two 10in. woofers and ideally two 12in. woofers to easily fill the room with bass energy and allow for placement far from room boundaries for the best imaging with good bass. The smaller the woofers are the closer the speakers must be placed to the walls for boundary reinforcement of the bass region and as you have noticed the imaging can suffer if the speakers are placed too close to room boundaries.I am filling a roughly 4400cu.ft. space with bass to below 20Hz with loudspeakers that have two 12in. woofers per side, peak sound pressure levels above 105dB are possible. I have frame walls and a concrete ceiling and floor. Excess bass loading was avoided by placing my speakers in front of the windows which form a 15ft. section of one wall in my living room.Good luck with this quest.Scotty
Since that shot sure looks like St. Louis Stereo, maybe one of the GAS guys could come over and bring another amp to see if that changes anything. Where are you in St. Louis? Did you buy the demo speakers from Charlie or were they new out of the box? I'm free this weekend if you live close to the 'Lou. Let us know if we can help
scotty, the o.p. has a serious problem that isn't being addressed so far by anyone's comments. first he stated:"...Using the same electronics and speaker positions my older Quad 11Ls (5" woofer, 1" fabric tweeter) produce very palpable bass..." also, he says his dealer's room, that he showed pictured, has at least as much open space as his listening room.there is no way his older quad 11l's should outperform totem mani-2's in the bass department in his room. while suggested bass traps might help, it still doesn't explain this. while speakers such as you suggest may also help, it also still doesn't explain this. something is wrong w/the speakers, or the amp, or the speaker-amp combo.doug s.
How about doing some room measurements to see what you really have?
You beat me to the punch JT. All this conjecturing could be put to rest with some measurements. I feel bad for the OP, he has already gone through a lot. And with a pair of speakers that are $4K and are known in the commercial dealer world for lots of bass. At least the Stereophile review confirms it.Anand.
How about doing some room measurements to see what you really have?All you need is an inexpensive Radio Shack SPL Meter and this from Real Traps. http://www.realtraps.com/test-cd.htmOf course you can get fancy but this will give everyone a really good idea of what you have. If you want you can PM me the data and I'll make the Excel graph unless you know how.
But will it tell him something that will help him figure out what the problem is and how to correct it?
I'm not an expert
I would think he's still going to end up trying different speaker and listening positions and listening to the differences.
wow, everyone is still missing ckimmelshue's point. let me try it again; ckimmelshue's said:"...Using the same electronics and speaker positions my older Quad 11L's (5" woofer, 1" fabric tweeter) produce very palpable bass..." all the measuring in the world, all the set-up in the world, to cardas speaker placement calcs., etc., does not explain what's happening here. the mani-2's are noted for good bass response. no way the quad 11l's will outperform them in the same room w/the same speaker location, if the mani-2's and its amp are working correctly. NO WAY. sure, the mani-2's are a demanding load. here's specs for the amp being used:the dsi200 delivers 200wpc continuously into an 8 ohm load, 400+wpc dynamically into 8 ohms, and 800+ dynamically into 4 ohms.once again, something is wrong w/the gear, or how it's hooked up...doug s.
ckimmelshue, if you have an iPhone you down load RTA Lite from the app store and it will give you a snapshot of what is going on in your room at the listening position. The screen shot above is an snapshot taken of pink noise at my listening position. If you can get this capability it will tell you a lot about what is going on in your room. The app is sensitive enough to show you the comb-filter effects that occur in the mid and high frequencies with minute changes in microphone position. Doug, the Quad 11L is an active loudspeaker with separate amps for the woofer and the tweeterand is not directly driven by his amp unlike his Mani2s which are. This is apple to oranges especially considering that the Quad 11L are dB down at 3dB at 50Hz and don't really do deep bass unlike the Mani2s which reach below 30Hz. Unlike the Quad11Ls the Mani2s do not gradually roll off the high frequencies. Room reinforcement of the lowest frequencies the Mani2 can produce will be required if a correct tonal balance is to be achieved to prevent the the Mani2s from sounding bass shy due to the presence of extended high frequency response. I am still unclear what the term "palpable" bass as used by the OP means. The Quad11Ls don't really have much output below 50Hz and would have less than the Mani2s in the same position in the same room. I think psycho-acoustic effects are in part responsible for the OPs reports of satisfactory bass response. I am hoping moving the speakers to a solid wall away from the windows results in enough room reinforcement of the bass that it will balance out the top end.Scotty
The results (though I wouldn't take for gospel the low frequency accuracy of the mic in an iPhone) don't show a drop at low frequencies. Also, from what I can see from the pics, the main difference between your room/setup and at the dealer is the proximity to the wall behind the speakers. Yours are considerably farther out into the room yielding less boundary gain. Bryan