john_k_antony
Well-Known Member
I got KEF Q300 in my dedicated HT room for my front L-C-R. 3 x KEF Q300, 1 each for L, C and R channels. I was really happy with the choice of KEF Q300 for L-C-R as Q300 delivered brilliant dialog clarity for movies. I am using Denon 2310 105w/ch to drive them.
Last couple of days, I have been cranking up the volume to pretty loud levels - 75-80% of volume level in Denon. What I have noticed is that the cones of front L-R KEF Q300 started to move very frantically during song sequences and some action sequence. Most disappointing this was that I started to hear very bad jarring sound from both L-R speakers while the cones are moving very vigorously. The jarring goes away when I turn the volume down to 70% and less. Even at very high volumes, the center channel speaker is loud and clear and doesn't move that much. I checked all my speaker cables and its polarity. Its all fine.
But I am really surprised to see the speakers running out of breath even at 75% of volume from Denon AVR which is rated at a max of 105/ch. KEF Q300 is rated for a maximum power of 120W.
I also tried setting the crossover to a very high frequency - 120Hz and still the cones were moving very vigorously. Initially it was set at 80Hz. I have set all the speakers as "Small" in the AVR. I was running the AVR in pure direct mode. I read somewhere that bass management is off during pure direct and AVR feeds the full range signal to all the speakers. But I also read that this will happen only if the speakers are set to "Large". I will try to run the same movie sequence in normal (not pure direct) mode and see if that helps.
Could this behavior due to any of the following
1. Though KEF rates Q300 to take a max load of 120W, it is not necessarily true. These speakers are designed to work with low powered stereo amps with 50w/ch output.
2. I need to chose speakers with a dedicated woofer and a separate mid range and tweeter drivers for movie watching?
3. The new Chinese made KEFs are lacking build quality??? The sound quality is very good when they are driven at a lower volume though.
4. Did I get faulty speakers?? I don't think so this is true. I will check with ProFx.
70% volume is not bad either, but I just thought of cranking the volume up for some movies and got this disappointing result.
Thanks,
John.
Last couple of days, I have been cranking up the volume to pretty loud levels - 75-80% of volume level in Denon. What I have noticed is that the cones of front L-R KEF Q300 started to move very frantically during song sequences and some action sequence. Most disappointing this was that I started to hear very bad jarring sound from both L-R speakers while the cones are moving very vigorously. The jarring goes away when I turn the volume down to 70% and less. Even at very high volumes, the center channel speaker is loud and clear and doesn't move that much. I checked all my speaker cables and its polarity. Its all fine.
But I am really surprised to see the speakers running out of breath even at 75% of volume from Denon AVR which is rated at a max of 105/ch. KEF Q300 is rated for a maximum power of 120W.
I also tried setting the crossover to a very high frequency - 120Hz and still the cones were moving very vigorously. Initially it was set at 80Hz. I have set all the speakers as "Small" in the AVR. I was running the AVR in pure direct mode. I read somewhere that bass management is off during pure direct and AVR feeds the full range signal to all the speakers. But I also read that this will happen only if the speakers are set to "Large". I will try to run the same movie sequence in normal (not pure direct) mode and see if that helps.
Could this behavior due to any of the following
1. Though KEF rates Q300 to take a max load of 120W, it is not necessarily true. These speakers are designed to work with low powered stereo amps with 50w/ch output.
2. I need to chose speakers with a dedicated woofer and a separate mid range and tweeter drivers for movie watching?
3. The new Chinese made KEFs are lacking build quality??? The sound quality is very good when they are driven at a lower volume though.
4. Did I get faulty speakers?? I don't think so this is true. I will check with ProFx.
70% volume is not bad either, but I just thought of cranking the volume up for some movies and got this disappointing result.
Thanks,
John.