Were you including images or links?
No, just words and a couple of product names and the title of a movie where I was having an audio issue.
Here is a post I tried to send to all who responded to my short post by replying to my original, also rejected. Can you see in it where it failed the censor?
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Thanks everyone--I first tried to post a longer detailed explanation last night but the spam filter blocked me for no obvious reason. (How do you contact a forum admin to report such a problem?)
I had a full hearing test at a major hospital in the last year and my hearing is excellent for my age. That is 70, so I expect there will be problems (and I also would likely not benefit from spending thousand$ on hi-end speakers.)
I am listening to the Pioneer SP-PK52FS 5.1 system I just bought based in large part on the review here at Audioholics. The center speaker is right at the edge of the shelf under the screen, the floor is carpeted, and there is not a coffee table or other hard surface between me and the speaker.
The manual for the HTR-6230 shows 2 places to adjust speaker level, p.19 is in basic setup and p.33 is in manual setup; I accessed this thru the latter and did my best to have the 4 corner speakers at the same level and the center higher (enough, but not crazy louder). I will recheck this, I didn't see a dB level for my change but maybe I missed it.
I have increased the 300Hz and 1kHz bands in the graphic equalizer by 2dB. I will apply same adjustment to 3Hz.
I have been looking at a receiver upgrade so have been much more critical in my listening lately. I decided to address this problem at a spot in Casino Royale where Bond and Vesper are talking quietly and I had to grab the remote control to push the volume up, then back down for the next action sequence. I know some movies just do a poor job with the sound editing in dialog sequences, so I will do the best I can in my system and downrate the movies that deserve it.
I do not want to go into "night mode" if I can help it. Want to preserve dynamic range as much as possible. But maybe this topic deserves more coverage.
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