Hi Group. . .
First, I want to thank Audioholics and the group members in Loudspeakers for helping me decide on which high end speaker to purchase. What a great group of informed and polite people.
Purchased the Triton 5 towers and the Rotel RA-1570 integrated amplifier this past Friday and have no regrets. . just some questions. (I must say the dealer from whom I purchased the Tritons and Rotel was extremely knowledgeable, friendly and patient. . .but sometimes questions don't arise until you get home and hook up everything.) My listening area is my living room (about 400 sq. ft.) in my small apartment. The speakers are about 9 ft. apart and about 10 inches from the back and sidewalls.
My system is comprised of the Triton 5s, the Rotel RA-1570, Oppo 105D-BDP, Pioneer PL-550 Direct Drive Turntable with Denon-110 MC cartridge.
My questions:
1. The Rotel has a digital volume screen display. I have to turn the Rotel up to 25 to even here anything even faint, for both the turntable and the Oppo. Is this normal?
2. Is it normal to have to turn up the Rotel all the way up to 45 just to get a decent (in my view) listening level?
3. It seems my volume listening range is between 45 and 65, on the digital volume output level on the front screen of the Rotel.
a. Above 65, I seem to get distortion through the speakers at many different frequency levels.
b. When I'm that high in the volume level (which is where it seems I have to be to get quality listening), aren't I reaching levels where distortion normally starts creeping in, no matter what? It kind of disappoints me that I have to go so high on the volume to reach a listening level that a like. . .but just a touch further and I'm into noticeable distortion areas.
Okay, I must admit that I have only about 10 hours listening time on the Tritons and the Rotel, and that things will "smooth out" a bit at about 60 hours, as my audiophile friends tells me. But I'm still going to have to turn the Rotel up to about at least 55 to get a decent listening level, and that worries me because it would seem on the edge of distortion, given that the Rotel likely has a maximum level of 100.
4. On my Oppo 105, under speaker configuration, there is a trim option, which I have at 0, and a distance level, which I have at 9 feet. Does anyone have any thoughts on how adjustments to trim or distance might help smooth out distortion at the 65+ level, when the Oppo is my listening source.
5. On the Oppo's output volume, I used to listen comfortably with the output at 85. Now when I go past 80 on the output level on the Oppo to the Rotel to the Triton's, I get a muddling of sound.
6. Finally. . .and I understand the Triton's have passive bass radiators, not woofers, per se. . .but I can't seem to listen to loud rock 'n' roll music without a lot of distortion and muddling of sound at all levels. I tried listening to El Camino by the Black Keys on the Oppo at any level through the Rotel and Tritons, and it just isn't happening.
Let me close on a positive. When I listen to, say, CSN by Crosby, Stills and Nash on vinyl or The Best of Tracy Chapman on CD, and keep the volume level at about 54-55, the sound is full, great soundstage, no distortion or muddling of sound, and a very warm and inviting experience. I am happy with my purchase, but, heck, it was quite a bit of change - both monetarily and spiritually, as spiritually relates to how we listen to our music - and I don't want to be limited to a quality listening level between 45-65 volume level and want to be able to listen to my entire music catalog, which includes hundreds and LPs and thousands of CDs, some of which I'd like to listen to at a louder level, if possible, without the distortion that occurs above 65 on the Rotel. And again, I can't seem to listen to anything below 45, because volume at or below that level seems distant and faint.
I thank you all in advance for taking the time to answer any or all of my questions. This is such a valuable forum and group.
Markinrockford