Yeah I was already thinking that. As a matter of fact I already redone the cables and went straight to the crossover from the pre amp, bypassing the equalizers all together.
I don't know if it was the balanced power conditioner or bypassing the equalizers but the sound really sounded tighter and just alot more powerful and seems more controlled altogether.The bass sounded thin and lacking before, now the bass it tight and sounds real powerful (for lack of a better explaination).
I knew something had to be wrong , before the way the 4350's sounded. So by either eliminating the 4400's or running everything through the balanced power conditioner really woke the sound up. Iam not one to play a small gain to something huge as some do like with different cables,interconnects ect, but there is a major difference as to what it sounded like before and now.
Back to the equalizers what is your suggestion as to what equalizers to try next.Iam not going to be as concerned in cost as much as Iam quality (within reason). I just don't think that I need to be spending 3-4 thousand on equalizers but quality and sound is the priority here.
I also wanted to mention that I now run the TV through the balanced power conditioner and the ground loop it caused before is also gone for what that's worth.
Meyer Sound CP10.
http://www.meyersound.com/products/p...systems/cp-10/
Widget
+1
The Widget knows...
A very compelling alternative is the Klark Teknik DN370. One helluva unit. I have a pile of both these units.
If you get a good price on someone eBay'ing a CP10, the choice will be easy. The DN370 can be very costly (I was stunned by a recent quote on eBay) and is wonderful sounding. Shop around. Check with Full Compass - ask for George Koury.
btw, used DN360's are rumored to benefit from "maintenance" to get the filters back to spec. I only pass along what I hear from those that owned them.
If both these are beyond your price point, I'd next consider the BSS FCS 966 or Ashly GQX3102 - both these offerings are constant Q (and fairly broad) but are good sounding. I'd avoid anything Rane, and the dbx 1231, is just what it is - an ordinary offering that works pretty well. I'd pick it over Rane.
Might save a little if you find a CP-10S (no knobs), but it's not really a liability,
as you get your speaker/room measured/adjusted in, the settings will
settle in and pretty much stay put. I have one of each and the knobs are
just helpful to have a gross visual idea of the setting and can speed things
up (a little). Actually nice to -not- have the knobs once set... can dispense
with the security panel. Live/event adjusting? different beast (need knobs )
If you don't have a measurement system, which I'd strongly recommend
you do get, I'd skip the parametric. It's possible to work a 1/3 octave EQ
with warble tones and other tools, but attempting to perform compensation
using a parametric EQ without a measurement system will end in frustration.
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