I have been experimenting with direct, pure direct and l/r bypass on Audyssey a lot lately. I like some things about direct or bypass and I also like things that Audyssey does. I can't seem to get the best of both at the same time tho.
When I'm in direct mode I get more of that mid bass that kicks you in the chest from my towers, which I like, but the rest just doesn't sound as good to me as having Audyssey enabled. Basically, I like Audyssey's room correction, but it makes my towers sound anemic in the bass department. Even at full range. If I turn the subs off and set the towers to full range my low end just disappears.
In direct mode there's actually too much bass (no sub, just towers). It gets a little muddy and a lot boomy. Plugging the ports on the towers tames it down and I still get that punch. I tried l/r bypass in the Audyssey settings and set the crossover at 40hz and it sounded pretty good. The Hsu's were giving me the extension in the lower octaves and the towers give me the punch in the middle, but the upper frequencies were muddy. I prefer Audyssey's room correction on the upper frequencies over direct.
I prefer Audyssey's eq settings when I'm running the subs with the towers, but I feel like the towers have more to add from what I hear in direct mode and I don't know how to get it dialed in. I do still have that unopened 2x4 MiniDSP HD... Is this a case of me preferring a hump in the mid-lower range that would not measure flat or do I need to just stfu and be happy with what I have?
If the editor app worked like it was supposed to, this could even be something fun for me to experiment with.
*Edit: I've tried turning dynamic eq on and off with all of the different modes I experimented with. Turning it on in l/r bypass made the bass explode when I didn't plug the ports. It was quite impressive actually. I believe SVS when they claim these towers dig down into the upper 20's, no problem.