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I've got a "home theater" receiver/amp with an A-B speaker switch. The
"A" speakers are in my listening room, the "B" speakers are on the patio in the backyard. When I have them both switched on, the B speakers are much louder than the A speakers. If I want to listen to music in the house at a moderately loud level, my wife runs in from outside and tells me to turn it down before the neighbors complain. So I bought an L-pad for the B speakers, thinking that would enable me to turn them down... (Here's where it gets weird...) When I turn down the L-pad, the B speakers go down in volume, BUT SO DO THE A SPEAKERS! I'm totally confused. Does this mean the A speakers and the B speakers are connected in parallel or something? Do I need to put an L-pad on the A speakers as well? Will that get them working independently? Further complication: This is a "home theater" amp, with separate outputs for a subwoofer, center channel, and two rear channel speakers. Will putting an L-pad in the A speakers (which also serve as the front channel speakers for the home theater setup) screw up the balance of my home theater system? I thought I had a pretty good handle on all this stuff until today! TIA for any help! Chip |