
Verdinut
Audioholic Spartan
I totally agree with TLS Guy's reply in post#12 above about the crossover which you are using. It is not appropriate with your speaker drivers.I rather not mention any brand or model names. I have a high end 2005 receiver, its almost 50 pounds in weight, $2000 brand new, amazing low freqs it produces. I was lucky to find it lightly used 2 years ago on internet for almost $400 including delivery.
The stats on my receiver is 120 watts x 7 (840 watts-not 500 watts as I stated before), 8 ohms, also using a seperate EQ, have 2 speaker boxes, per speaker box includes all 8 ohms- 1- 15" bass subwoofer 600 watt, 1- 8" midrange 300 watts each, 1- 3.75" tweeter 300 watts, not sure of other info.
The crossovers I bought 4 months ago (over heating resistors started 4 or so days ago), are generic and handles 1000 watts each at 8 ohms. The resistors had to go due to them getting too hot to the point of smelling like over heated plastic or ceramic only when playing at very loud volumes for an hour. They would of eventually burned or damaged the circuit board. Will either solder a wire or 20 watt resistors, may order a solder gun today or tomorrow. At least with a solder gun you don't have to use a 2nd hand to hold the solder, you just use 1 hand and press the lever and place melted solder at a precise spot.
The crossovers I had before I bought the new crossovers lasted 15 years and they never had resistors. The midrange (not the tweeter) sounded too loud on those older crossovers (as well as the new ones) and I all I need to do is lower the highs on my EQ's to give me the exact sound I want.
Also, your 7 channel receiver has a rated power output per channel of 120 watts. But the total power output per channel would be reduced if you used the All Channel Stereo playback setting, as its power supply is not adequate to produce 120 watts on all channels simultaneously. IMO, no AVR on the market is designed to produce the full rated power on that setting. Your AVR will likely output 90 watts/ch at the most with all channels driven.