Just hooked up my new “refurbished “ Denon AVR-X3600H. I ran Audyssey and everything went very smooth. It put my towers to large and I changed the to small but could not find the crossover adjustment list.
It sounds pretty good but I had company come over so left it alone and watched a few movies and television. Now that I have time I can’t find where to check crossover options, can’t even find where to set Audyssey on/ off options. I’m lost.lol
Can anyone help me navigate Audyssey or share a link that would help me to use it better? Also I would appreciate if members leave their opinions adout how and why they use or don’t use certain features of Audyssey such as dynamic eq and such..
Thanks for any help .
You can also see my comments post-setup to someone else:
Since you ran Audyssey one thing some avrs do is turn on Audyssey's Dynamic Volume (a dynamic compression routine) automatically and I'd just turn that off as that's my preference not to have that running (might be handy for late nite listening and keeping things a little more tolerable for others in the house). Audyssey's Dynamic EQ is also usually turned on automatically; this I personally find very handy but is mainly setup for movies to start, with music I think you might prefer to use it in conjunction with the Reference Level Offset settings. Some will change particular speaker levels after running Audyssey to suit, sub is the most frequently cited one (many bump it up 2-4 dB). If you're using a sub and any speakers were set to "large" I'd change them to small and probably start with an 80hz crossover and experiment from there.
Here are some comments by Audyssey on the subject of crossover and dynamic eq/RLO.
Crossover frequency
I have an Onkyo TXNR807 receiver - Does Audyssey automatically set the crossover frequency or do I need to do that as part of the speaker setup.
audyssey.zendesk.com
Dynamic EQ and Reference Level
What is Dynamic EQ and reference level?
audyssey.zendesk.com
ps I recommend downloading the pdf of the manual, easier to use and usually a better format