People, 11 pages now so how about take a step back and recap. Let me do it in point form.
1) The OP has been getting "break up", "cracking" in the "higher frequency effect".
2) Up until last night, he said 2.1 stereo was fine, and thought the issue was with the center channel.
3) Then last night he did his "close ear test" and found all channels have this same issue.
4) Prior to 3), his spl meter showed that he listened to 80-85 dB when watching a movie.
5) Also prior to 3) he thought he could hear the distortions in the center channel even at 65-70 dB spl.
6) Was happy with his system until he upgraded his AVR from the Pioneer VSX-23 to the Marantz AVR-6011.
7) Based on specs and best available bench test data of similar units, the Marantz seems slightly more powerful.
First of all, logically speaking, is AVR the culprit, or something else (please read C after):
8) Since he has been saying 2.1 stereo was fine, actually sounded good, so is it possible that he's hearing the distortions when the source media is the sound tracks of movies?
9) If yes, then this need to be investigated, at least by process of elimination. If not, then his AVR, or speakers must have deteriorated during the past couple of days.
Now take a look of some facts and figures:
11) Pioneer VSX-23TH vs Marantz AVR-6011 - Both 110W, two channel driven, both appears to follow FTC rule in specifying their rated power outputs, the Pio's power consumption was listed at 400W, Marantz 650W, both uses class AB amp.
12) Speakers - The mains are same as the center, but in vertical orientation so they have 2X5.25 mid/woofers, rated impedance are 4 ohms according to S&V but 8 ohms according to Hometheaterhifi.
Hometheaterhifi actually provided their graph, you can see that the phase angle plot doesn't look bad either.
Speaker sensitivity: Mains and center - 87 dB (assume 2.83V), surrounds 85 dB.
Based on the graph from the Hometheaterhifi review, those speakers should not be considered hard to drive in small rooms.
Again, logically speaking, is power deficiency the cause?
13) If the speakers being hard to drive (which they are not) is the issue, he should have had the same issue before the AVR upgrade, so this probably cause can be eliminated.
14) If the AVR power output is the issue, again, he should have similar issue with the VSX-23TH, and the math shows that at 65-70 dB, he needs less than 1W, probably even when watching a 5.1 movie, yet he was still getting the distortion at that low spl.
15) AVR matching - The speakers are rated for 20W-120W, even if they are 4 ohm rated (we have conflicting source), there shouldn't be any issue especially he is in a small room and sits 9 ft from the mains, 5-6 ft only from the surrounds. SVS will have to confirm whether their speakers are 4 or 8 ohm nominal.
I think from the above information provided from the OP and online sources, we are left with a couple of scenarios.
A) The speakers, or some of them have deteriorated since the time he replaced the Pioneer AVR, for reasons we do not know. This seems highly unlikely.
B) The Marantz AVR is defective, a factory reset may solve setting related issue, including the impedance selection setting. It is a long shot, but no harm trying. It only takes seconds to do a reset.
C) The source media and the player - Is it possible that the AVR and speaker is just being truthful to what is fed to them? This can be proved easily by playing some know to be high quality audio in 5 channel stereo mode. If Halon is interest to try this, I suggest he put some high quality jazz and classical music on an USB and play it via the front USB port, just to rule out any electronic device external to the AVR.
D) Halon is now listening much more critical to his new AVR than he did to his old Pioneer. Close ear test is a very harsh one because from my experience, no speakers ever sound nice in this test. Go visit a high end dealer and put your ears tight against the tweeter on some $30,000 speakers and you will agree with me.
One thing for sure, those speakers are
not hard to drive in a small room sitting 9 ft away even if they are 4 ohm rated. I don't know why people seem to think all 4 ohm speakers are hard to drive without considering room dimensions and sitting distance. The fact is, SVS rate them 20-120W so I am quite sure they are going to tell you the SR-6011 is more than adequate.