wow, was i surprised.
after three weeks of happy listening to the 1066/1075, i had noticed that my mains and cc started sounding a bit more 'boomy', of course relatively speaking. i've got the mains set to large, every other speaker set to small - for subwoofer purposes. i understand the break-in period perhaps led to the evolution of the sound....
my inquisitiveness led me to the front panel of the 1066- the bass and treble knobs. i moved both of them to the right, and the first click over brought them to "max"!
questions: is the default setting for bass and treble (out of the factory) supposed to be set to zero, or ten as it appears- i hadn't touched those knobs since i cracked open the box.
and.... should i leave them set at ten, or drop them down to zero? if i drop them to zero, the perceived sound is a bit more nasally from the paradigm studio 80s. is having them set to large vs. small an issue?
thanks, rotel gurus!
after three weeks of happy listening to the 1066/1075, i had noticed that my mains and cc started sounding a bit more 'boomy', of course relatively speaking. i've got the mains set to large, every other speaker set to small - for subwoofer purposes. i understand the break-in period perhaps led to the evolution of the sound....
my inquisitiveness led me to the front panel of the 1066- the bass and treble knobs. i moved both of them to the right, and the first click over brought them to "max"!
questions: is the default setting for bass and treble (out of the factory) supposed to be set to zero, or ten as it appears- i hadn't touched those knobs since i cracked open the box.
and.... should i leave them set at ten, or drop them down to zero? if i drop them to zero, the perceived sound is a bit more nasally from the paradigm studio 80s. is having them set to large vs. small an issue?
thanks, rotel gurus!



Comment