After nearly 20 years, I left Magnepan and went ProAc


Listened to proac d48r's a few weeks ago and fell in love at first listen. After a couple of days I got my wife to sign my "permission slip" and took the plunge and they now reside where my 1.6 once stood.  You see, I've never heard a speaker literally mesmerize me and engage me like this before.  Sure the Maggie's have a huge image and soundstage and transparency, but these Proacs simply sound more like a real event, with dynamics and palpability, with a more refined and true sound.  The images are much more dense.   

I only have 48 hours on them so they are nowhere near their final voice, but they are breaking in nicely.  The manual says they require a lengthy break in.  I pulled out my old marantz cd-5000 to do the break in honors and will run these straight for a week or two and then taper off with normal listening.   

One thing I dont care for are the spikes. They have these little slits that aid in tightening, but no tool to go around them, so I can't get a good tightening with just my fingers.......so the spikes jiggle.  When I check  I can hear the spike and lock but chatter, and   this is not helping my  stability or sound.  Any sugesstions to tighten them right would be helpful. Thanks.  Cheers to a new chapter!   Wanted to share my excitement with you.  So grateful and never thought I would have speakers like This.  It feels like a dream!

audiolover718

Showing 2 responses by gary_c

Audiolover718, do you live in the Portland, Oregon area by chance? I've owned the Studio 140 mkII and Response D28 in the past, and now using D38. I have a VERY similar room size and is a bonus room above the garage, but has 8ft straight ceiling. My room has issues with treble reflection, but seem to absorb bass; rarely if ever too much bass. Are you using a sub, and if so, have you tried turning it off? Seems like you have a strong wall and/or floor interaction. Your speakers are almost equidistant from the back and side walls; try moving them further from one of these walls so they're not equal distances. Is your room carpeted? Loose spikes not coupling the speakers to the subfloor? Try without spikes? I don't have experience with putting speakers (with spikes) on a separate plinth, but maybe someone else could tell us what impact this has on bass (more or less?). Try moving them closer to the walls; could be firmer bass if closer to wall? My D38's aren't that far from the walls and they image extremely well; they are 9ft apart due to projector screen and wide audio cabinet between them. Do NOT use the factory jumpers, especially if they're still using the solid metal rod. My D38's are toed in quite a bit, can barely see down the inside wall of speakers, to minimize wall reflections. This does impart more bass, but works well in my room. Maybe no or minimal toe-in for you; and move speakers farther apart? Is anything about the rest of your system geared towards more bass, for the maggies, possibly causing too much bass now? What speaker cables are you using? Can you borrow a different amp or integrated amp from your dealer to rule this out? If you live in the greater Portland area, you're welcome to listen to my system, and we could also try my integrated amp on your system. Your speakers are very nice and I don't think the size of your room is the issue, nor is break-in a factor for this particular problem.

Thanks for the update. I'll be interested in your results of height adjustment, as well as rake angle. My eyes and ears are at the same height as the tweeter on my D38's (by chance, not planned), but I haven't played with rake angle.

There are many theories on why a system can sound so different from day to day, but for me I think it's the varying sound quality and type of music that I listen to from day to day. However, I recently bought some SHM-CD's and have been listening to them exclusively for the last two weeks. System sounded perhaps better than ever last week and early this week, yet the last couple of days not so good. Strange, same exact recordings. I wonder if some of it is due to us personally - being tired, noise exposure during the day, or road noise on cummute home, etc. Some people think that power quality changes from day to day, and time of day; not sure about that one.

Take note of what you're listening to when your system is sounding good or bad, and see if your music is one of the variables.