1-5 of 5 Answers
Sounds like you got some things out of balance. How big is the room, what Towers? How many? where is the sub etc.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Recalibrate or up the DB's about 3 to 5 on your receiver to see if it helps.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Most likely it is either incorrectly hooked up or the settings on the back of the sub need adjustment. Do you have power to the plug? Some power strips have to have a "master" plug on before the others will work. Is the on/off/auto power switch on the back of the sub set to auto? If you are using a single line with RCA plug into the sub, use the left input. Adjust the gain up and the bypass to make sure you have it matched to your speakers. If all is well, take it back, it may be defective.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.I think this would depend on how your feeding the signal to your sub. Barring any actual problems with the sub unit itself, the only other possibility is not enough signal reaching your subwoofer. Most AVR's have a specific connection for a "powered" sub . Obviously you don't want to take speaker level audio and push it into a powered sub. Is it possible the AVR your using might have a problem with it's sub output? Since the sub "sums" the left and right channels fed to it, it's important that neither channel is out of phase or it will cancel all sounds that are "center stage" which would reduce the output of the sub.
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Figure it out? Had to turn my towers to small speakers so most of the bass would be routed to the sub. I have a pioneer receiver
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