Not familiar with those speakers but the speaker manual will tell you what they are, my guess would be 8 ohms so set your receiver to match your speakers.
James Could not agree with you more, i to auditioned the 9Ts and found the 7Ts much better with music. A local dealer in my area still carries the Phase T line but have not listened to any of there newer models.
Spades offer a better connection than banana plugs. Bare-wire does not separate the high/low frequency he's kidding or Dave_La is right he is on crack.
What model Bryston and parasound? Brystons are awesome amps and at cost they will sound even sweeter.You need at least 100 watts more power to make a audible difference so unless the Bryston is under 100 watts per channel power should not be a factor, Besides Bryston amps have plenty of reserve...
i have compared the 936s with B&W N802s and to my ears are a much better value for $2500.00 less. Not as bright as the 802s and much better low end. Thanks for your replies and if anyone else has compared them with any other brands please chime in.
Just wondering if anybody has auditioned or own the Electra 926,936, or 946 series from JMlab? If so what speakers did you audition them against and how did they compare. Your thoughts are appreciated.
I own the Arcam AV8 pre/pro and could not be happier with its performace.I have read reviews on some of there amps,all positive but have not personally listened to any of there amps.
Wondering is there any negatives to using 2 subs in a HT system made by different manufacturers, such as a SVS and HSU sub in the same system.
Thanks;)
I own B&W N802 and could not be happier with them. I have tried differnt amps (parasound,cinepro,cinenova,legacy)to name a few with the 802s and currenly using PS Audio HCA-2 amps to drive them W/ a Mac MX132 Pre/pro and found the holy grail.I believe the right combo makes the speakers.
I would calibrate at 75db. Calibrating at 85db could possibly cause damage to your speakers. I personally use a rat shack spl meter and set my calibrations at 75db slow response c weighted.
With a three to two prong cheater plug you are elimanating the ground from the unit. with a ground loop isolater it breaks the ground loop by using a transformer to completely isolate the singal from the ground connection. Jason-Pro how is your sub connected to your reciever? If you are using a...
Sounds like a ground loop. Try a three prong to two prong cheater plug and if the hum goes away you have a ground loop probally caused by a cable tv or dbs system connected to your tv. This is only a temporary fix and you should purchase a ground loop isolator. Hope this solves your problem:)