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Shiva

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Posts posted by Shiva

  1. As an experiment, ask your friend if you could borrow his RC-7 and see if it has the same bass extension that you heard at his house. Perhaps, it is your set up, and or room placement or receiver that is inhibiting the bass response of the C-7 in some way.

  2. I think you should start simple and expand from there as needed. Since you mentioned class D amps, look into the Pioneer Elite receivers with the class D amps., one of the higher up the line SC models. If you like the sound you hear from that, then you have only one piece driving everything, except for the subs. If your not happy with the power, get a three channel amp for the fronts and let the receiver drive the surrounds.

  3. What you need to get is called an F-connector phono adapter. They have them at radio shack.. The catalog part # is 278-290. They screw onto the coaxial cable and have a male RCA on the other end. So for the subwoofer, you screw it onto the end of the coax cable and push it onto either the left or right input on the subwoofer. For the receiver, you attach the needed length of coax from the wall plate and put the adapter on it and push it onto the subwoofer input. Then you will be good to go.

  4. Great gear. Listened to your speakers on youtube and they sounded great. I am wondering though if you had ever thought of wrapping your panels in a fabric that would blend into the walls. I think it would take your room up another notch.

  5. Just some other things you can look into since you are already familiar with projectors. My brother has one of the latest projectors from BenQ. I can't remember the model off hand. It is a DLP and he says it puts out a bright enough image to view in daylight. Another thing to look into is a screen from a company called Black Diamond, if you haven't heard about it already. They have designed a screen that is supposed to block out ambient light. You can read up about it over at AVS forum on the screen forum.

  6. Hey Psg,

    The plants have been there for the last 8 years or so without any mishap. I like plants for how they break up the hard edges of the speakers and of course, plants please the eye and add to the rooms feel. Each pot does have some redundant features for a just in case. Thanks for the props on my setup.

  7. The PS3 and the Oppo are both great players. I think their Blu-ray playback is pretty comparable in regards to picture, sound quality and load times, though the PS3 may load a bit faster. The Oppo has an impressive build quality and has a very simple set-up. I got it mainly as a way to replace 2 pieces with one. The fact that the Oppo plays all the hi-res discs that I have- DVD-Audio and SACD's plus its Blu-ray function and Netflix connectivity, made it worth the upgrade.

  8. The epics are version 1's for those that are interested. Here is how it looked at night with the Ps3 displaying earth scenes while Dark side of the moon was playing. I have since replaced the ps3 and the Oppo 980 for the Oppo 93. Truly a minimalist sound system now, with only 4 pieces doing everything, except for the playing of records of course.

    post-16279-1381965887241_thumb.jpg

  9. Some other great qualities of the Epics are the way they image. When I put a friend in the sweet spot while playing music and tell them the voice is coming from the big speakers only, they don't believe me and have to get up and see for themselves that the center channel is not on. Also, the horn section is big at 9" x 13". It puts out a very large sound that is never piercing but effortless and bold. You could put these in a movie theater, behind the screen and I bet they would do the job. When you hear Stan Getz's sax on these, you will smile, and the power of a drum strike on the Epics is slamming. LIstening to the Cream reunion concert with Ginger Baker on his drum kit will fill your room. I have heard alot of speakers in my life. Just recently, I listened to my music for about an half hour on a pair of Vandersteen Quatros, which were $7000 dollar speakers. They were definately nice, but they couldn't touch the fullness and power and slam of the Epics. Not even close.

  10. I have a a pair of Epic CF3's, and they are a fantastic speaker. They use pro grade drivers with neo magnets, They are 100DB eff. and yet you can pump 250 watts continou s with 1000 watt peaks. They are pretty big at 41" by 17" by 17" which gives them a fairly large internal volume and produce tremendous bass and are also incredibly smooth. These are never bright. I am listening to the Blu-ray of Yes live at montreux right now and they as usual blow me away with concert level slam, and do so with ease. These will blow away the wf-35 and a great many others as well. Get yourself a kv-4 or a klf c-7 as I do for a center, and you will have a system that will leave nothing to be desired. Definate upgrade

  11. Another thing I read about the Epics is that the earlier versions had gray colored woofers that became black in version 3. Yours look gray in color. It was also said that the woofers in the version 3's became the ones used in the KLF series. I have a pair of Epic CF3's version 1. I have had them for several years now and am still quite happy with them. I think someone who had them before you might have been confused about the port length issue and mistakenly put in shorter ones.

  12. There is another option which is to take some steps to soundproof the room. If you want to spend a bit of money, put some double paned glass in your windows. They do an incredible job of containing sound.

    The last house I was in had them and you could crank the music as loud as you could stand and not be able to hear it standing outside the glass.

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