Are Wilson Sophia 2's lean in the midbass?


I've recently auditioned Sophia 2's and found them to be very lean in the midbass (but nice speaker overall) and am wondering if this observation is typical or unusual.

Thanks.
madfloyd
I own these speakers and they are not lean. Placement is the issue. If they were not voiced/placed by a wilson dealer you might consider paying them to do this for you.
I own these Speakers and have used them with Amplifiers from BAT, McIntosh, Krell & PASS and they have always sounded full-bodied and awesome - never lean - not even close.
Tusa - not to offroad the thread - but what amps did you find sound best with them? I have have them sounding fantastic on a sim amp with a hovland pre.
Lean? Uh, NO! In fact, they are one of the fullest most dynamicaly alive speakers around. My room has a suckout so I had to take my time and move the speakers about a 1/2" at a time forward and back playing known material with the appropriate frquency range reproduced. Less than an inch can be the difference between OK sound and absolute bliss:O)
It doesn't look like something you should do if accuracy and lifelike sound are your goals.

LOL. I suppose they are trying to make everything inaccurate and as lifeless as possible in places like the
Cello Studios Sunset Blvd Hollywood (all three principal control rooms have soffit mounted main monitors)

Here is a link to an acoustic architecture website who design rooms for high profile musicians and producers (check the private installation client list from Steve Hackett to Ron Wood to David Gilmour you'll find some familiar names). There are some fun pics too - you'll find a good portion of main monitors (full ranger speakers) built into studio walls for the reasons explained in the Genelec link I gave above and to improve imaging too (but it is mainly for bass response).