I’ve disabled Audyssey altogether. I’ve spent a few hours last night critically listening to music and trying AEQ vs Manual. I definitely prefer manual.
Although, this unit seems to be lacking somewhere, i can’t quite figure out where just yet. The eq system in general may be my issue. Not sure.... Maybe i need to purchase the iPhone Audyssey app.
I’ll be placing an order this week of the Yamaha a1080 to directly compare.
There was a few times last night i was scratching my head asking myself “is this unit really worth 800 bucks?” I sure wouldn’t pay retail price for it!
I love a lot of the features it offers, and not so much on some other things.
In my experience even XT32 is not capable of dialing in the subwoofers with tower speakers that have good response down to 30 Hz. I found the only way to get them dialed in to produce the flattest possible response in my room is to try different XO. All else being equal, 80 and 90 Hz seem to work best in my room. After that, you can add 2 to 4 dB to the subwoofer level to your liking if you prefer the effect. Apparently Anthem ARC would ramp up the low bass to try and simulate room effect, I don't buy that approach at all and I much prefer Audyssey's Editor App approach that gives some (not a whole lot either) control to the user.
Until you have the App, the best you can do now is to make sure you run all 8 positions, follow instructions to the letter. Once that's done try the following as a starting point:
- Set front and center to small (the surrounds will follow).
- Set front and center XO to90 Hz.
- Set surrounds, heights XO to 90 Hz or higher depending on their - 3 dB response.
- Set Dynamic EQ to "ON", Dyn vol to "Off"
- Set LPF for LFE to 120 Hz or higher.
Boost subwoofer(s) level by 3 dB.
Then just sit back and enjoy your favorite movies for at least a day, then you can start playing with different XO points such as 80 Hz, 100 Hz, but I wouldn't go below 80 Hz regardless of what speakers you have. When you have the App you can then play around more.
Manual EQ may be fun, but in theory I can't see how it can be better than auto, I don't care if it is Yamaha's parametric, let alone graphic. The approach is inherently inferior, though on a hit and miss basis it may work great in some instances that also would depend on certain conditions (star alignment of sort..) that are highly variable.
If after trying everything, you still think something is off, then you may as well move on to something different such as the RX-AXX80, because at that point, I think expectation bias would have set in..., so nothing else is going to fix it for you.