For some different ideas..
The fact the components need time to break in is true.
I would not change anything for at least a few weeks.
The speakers will ’break in’.
As for the problem with the high frequencies..
Usually it is not a problem with the actual tweeters. it is a problem with crappy high frequency input.
A lot of digital equipment has a poor HF sounding output.
I call this stuff digital grunge.
The cheapest wat to ’control’ HF hash are ferrite clamps on the interconnects. They just dampen the higher frequencies to ’tame’ them some. AudioQuest makes some, so did Radio shack.
Amazon has PLENTY. go to electronic, type in ’ferrite choke’ You want some which will clamp over the cable exactly.. the correct inner diameter of the clamp should be the outer diameter of the cable. Several on each cable may work too.
This is a BAND AIDE fix. (So you can ’see’ if yeah this helps.. or no this does nothing for me) Cheaply.
IF they work, you might consider adding at some point a power conditioner. This kind of device also tames the ’digital grunge’ kind of the way a better power supply does in expensive components.
The fact the components need time to break in is true.
I would not change anything for at least a few weeks.
The speakers will ’break in’.
As for the problem with the high frequencies..
Usually it is not a problem with the actual tweeters. it is a problem with crappy high frequency input.
A lot of digital equipment has a poor HF sounding output.
I call this stuff digital grunge.
The cheapest wat to ’control’ HF hash are ferrite clamps on the interconnects. They just dampen the higher frequencies to ’tame’ them some. AudioQuest makes some, so did Radio shack.
Amazon has PLENTY. go to electronic, type in ’ferrite choke’ You want some which will clamp over the cable exactly.. the correct inner diameter of the clamp should be the outer diameter of the cable. Several on each cable may work too.
This is a BAND AIDE fix. (So you can ’see’ if yeah this helps.. or no this does nothing for me) Cheaply.
IF they work, you might consider adding at some point a power conditioner. This kind of device also tames the ’digital grunge’ kind of the way a better power supply does in expensive components.