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Tell the wife they are end tables and put them out in the room where they sound best! Let her arrange the furniture around them!
(oh yeah, that'll work)
Have you tested other placements & determined that this location is best from the standpoint of the sub's freq. response in the room? Or is it a matter of the room/furniture layout & space available?
Tim Conway & Harvey Korman on Carol Burnette's show - what a pair! Some of the funniest shit ever! Rarely do you see anything better than that team. :handgestures-thumbup:
Is an intervention called for when guys buy so much that they have to have their speakers/subwoofers delivered on pallets or skids? You know who you are! :obscene-buttred:
I've posted the DIY solution link to this problem at least 3 times in other threads. Replacing caps on the HDMI board with higher temp rated ones (for $20 or less) solves the problem. Decision time: spend $20 to fix the problem or $1000+ to buy a new receiver. And no, I'm not looking for...
I've posted this link before. HDMI sound/picture problems are sometimes caused by bad caps on the HDMI board. This applies to many of Onkyo's receiver models manufactured a few years ago. If you want to try a DIY repair, for $20 or less you can replace the caps with higher temp rated ones...
Every application? So you're saying even a cheap, no-name brand Walmart 4k set will be better than a top of the line Samsung or Panasonic 1080 calibrated one? I doubt it. Cost cutting, poor design & implementation will not be a thing of the past.