kuebler
Active member
Yesterday my Summits finished their travel over the Atlantic and arrived at my home. Because I didn't have time, I only exchanged the Clarity front speakers against the Summits and quickly let some 7.1 music play for checking whether everything was ok. It appeared ok, and I even had the subjective impression of an improvement.
Some hours later, just for curiosity, I quickly let them play music in stereo. Boy, how was I shocked! Nearly no bass at all! Not zero, but close to it. I have difficulty with the english terms, but I would describe the sound as highly tinny, or better outright squawky, to the degree I would expect from a bad small portable battery radio. Of course the mids and highs were not like from such a radio, but I'm trying to describe the sonal balance characteristics. And I'm definitively not exaggerating, as I'm sure not the type of highend guy, who gets a nervous breakdown when somebody exchanges his Nordost power cables against standard wires ;-)
I got big paranoia of something being fundamentally wrong or broken, and imagined the nightmare to have ship them back. I quickly considered whether my operation using a 1,000 VA 220->110 volt converter at 50 Hz AC frequency might cause a problem, but I couldn't see that. Then I calmed down a bit and got some relief from the fact, that both speakers showed the same characteristics. So it appeared unlikely that both would have the same defect.
I increased the bass at the receiver until the tonal balance was no longer so ridiculous. From this I guesstimate that the bass weakness is at least 10 db!
The Summit manual tells about break in, "they will sound a bit bass shy". A bit bass shy! The understatement of the year!
At the moment I have them running in a closed room with lots of bass emphasized pink noise being pumped into them, in order to reach the announced 72 hours maybe a bit earlier.
But I would be interested in comments of others: can this all be such as I appear to experience it?
Some hours later, just for curiosity, I quickly let them play music in stereo. Boy, how was I shocked! Nearly no bass at all! Not zero, but close to it. I have difficulty with the english terms, but I would describe the sound as highly tinny, or better outright squawky, to the degree I would expect from a bad small portable battery radio. Of course the mids and highs were not like from such a radio, but I'm trying to describe the sonal balance characteristics. And I'm definitively not exaggerating, as I'm sure not the type of highend guy, who gets a nervous breakdown when somebody exchanges his Nordost power cables against standard wires ;-)
I got big paranoia of something being fundamentally wrong or broken, and imagined the nightmare to have ship them back. I quickly considered whether my operation using a 1,000 VA 220->110 volt converter at 50 Hz AC frequency might cause a problem, but I couldn't see that. Then I calmed down a bit and got some relief from the fact, that both speakers showed the same characteristics. So it appeared unlikely that both would have the same defect.
I increased the bass at the receiver until the tonal balance was no longer so ridiculous. From this I guesstimate that the bass weakness is at least 10 db!
The Summit manual tells about break in, "they will sound a bit bass shy". A bit bass shy! The understatement of the year!
At the moment I have them running in a closed room with lots of bass emphasized pink noise being pumped into them, in order to reach the announced 72 hours maybe a bit earlier.
But I would be interested in comments of others: can this all be such as I appear to experience it?