Haha, looks like I have to reveal what the components are as my plan to keep bias low is now leading to varied info. They aren't Bose, but they have just as low of an opinion to them, when it comes to audio especially.
The receiver set up is a Sony set up and I heard alot of popular buzz (and I'm a cheap *** SOB) so I bought a set of Fluance speakers. I paid less than $300 for the 5 speakers, which I think is a pretty damn good deal, considering they included towers and they were not the bottom line model either. They sound pretty nice, except for this issue that has been a mystery pain in my *** for the last while.
So everyone thinks its the receiver set up and not the speakers? Could think have anything to do with ohms? I just want to make sure that the speakers are still awesome speakers and that when I get a higher end receiver, it will play all channels without a hitch. If anyone could reassure me of that, please. lol
I appreciate the first 2 commenter contributions as well even though I didn't quote you, thanks.
Like the others, I will assume this a Bose setup. It sounds to me like you have the receivers front speaker outputs connected to the Bose 'sub module' and other speakers connected to the sub module but then probably tried to add addtional speakers connected directly to the receiver's 'surround' outputs.
I would assume there is no dedicated center channel speaker either - other than maybe one that is connected to the sub module.
Bose systems are meant to work as one unit, all handled by the sub module (poorly). To make it work with a regular receiver, you have to have the receiver in stereo mode and set up all other channels as 'off'/'no' in the receiver setup and subwoofer=no too. Stereo info is sent to the sub module and it does its magic EQ and sending the sounds to respective channels. If you have additional speakers connected to the surround outputs, the receiver is taking out-of-phase sound from the two front channels and trying to send it to the rear. There isn't much there and that is why the volume is low and it sounds terrible.
Yup, other than Bose, I think you got a handle on it. The whole "stack" sits atop the subwoofer. The receiver connects to the subwoofer via a flat wide cable and all the audio channels are designated out the back of the woofer.
But wouldn't rear channels need to have a lower volume connection? Since they have much smaller speakers than towers do? Like if all the channels output the exact same sound and I cranked it, I imagine that the towers would be alright but the smaller rear channels would be damaged. You don't think that this is a defense mechanism that they built into the system?
It's funny you mention about the center channel. It is along with the rest of the channel outputs, but no sound comes out of it when it is in surround mode, only when you switch to "3ch" mode for the 2 fronts and center. Dunno, lol.
You correctly deduced that the speakers themselves seem to be fine. Unfortunately...
Due to the proprietary nature of this connection you will need to trash those speakers along with the malfunctioning amplifier.
Look on the brighter side, you have found the right group of people to guide you away from making any imprudent purchases
You were starting to scare me for a second, but I think I have an idea of what you are talking about. The only thing that is dependent on the receiver out of any of the speakers is the subwoofer that is permanently attached to it. All the rest use standard speaker wire and are able to be separated. Phew*