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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
New house - Flat sound, no dpeth or base?
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<blockquote data-quote="Vaughan" data-source="post: 45662" data-attributes="member: 693"><p>It's also possible you are sitting in a null (acoustic cancellation) which covers a relatively wide area which would explain the suck out you are experiencing in the bass. Generally speaking, the smaller the room, the worse it gets. </p><p></p><p>Although it wouldn't explain why you are hearing no bass at all, unless you were simply over exaggerating. No acoustic cancellations result in 100% sound losses (unless the walls were infinitely rigid and reflective) so unless the speakers are/were connected out of phase (by mistake) or the bass drivers are defective in some way or you are sitting in a null which is pretty wide, you should be hearing some bass. </p><p></p><p>Are you using a subwoofer ? Or are the B&W speakers handling all bass duties ? Are you not hearing bass on some sources or all sources ? </p><p></p><p>Regards,</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vaughan, post: 45662, member: 693"] It's also possible you are sitting in a null (acoustic cancellation) which covers a relatively wide area which would explain the suck out you are experiencing in the bass. Generally speaking, the smaller the room, the worse it gets. Although it wouldn't explain why you are hearing no bass at all, unless you were simply over exaggerating. No acoustic cancellations result in 100% sound losses (unless the walls were infinitely rigid and reflective) so unless the speakers are/were connected out of phase (by mistake) or the bass drivers are defective in some way or you are sitting in a null which is pretty wide, you should be hearing some bass. Are you using a subwoofer ? Or are the B&W speakers handling all bass duties ? Are you not hearing bass on some sources or all sources ? Regards, [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
New house - Flat sound, no dpeth or base?
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