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3.3Defining the Soundstage
A common problem we find with many
If you find that the sound is not spacious enough or you are not getting enough front to back depth, pull the speaker away from the front wall. This is typically preferable to separating the two speakers too far, and will almost always give you better depth and soundstage information. A word of caution though: if you move the speakers too far from the front wall you may lose the focus of the image.
3.4Appropriate Mid-bass Balance
Yet another problem is a lack of
With the broad wings of the Genesis 1.1, we have not found this to be a problem. However, if the gap between the two towers is more than 7 feet, you will find that the speakers lose coupling, and the
If you find there isn't enough deep bass, your first remedy is the volume control on the woofer amplifier. This has several limitations. First, turned up too high, you may get some distortion on very low frequencies or you may overheat the amplifier.
Push the woofer towers back towards the rear wall. This will increase the coupling of the woofers to the room. Do this procedure in small increments (approximately one inch at a time), and return often to the recordings you have used to adjust the front to back depth and soundstage properties of your system. It is easy, yet unproductive, to go too far in one direction. If you move the woofer towers too far from the rear wall you may lose low bass extension, too near and you may get too much wall reinforcement.
Secondly, you may make the
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