Originally posted by squebel:
I have my digital cable box hooked up the the 1070 using the analog inputs. When I put the selected input in Bypass mode I get a nice 2ch stereo signal that has plenty of volume and I don't need to turn the volume dial up much on the 1070. However, if I put that same input into any Dolby mode the volume produced by the amp drops way down. I need to crank the dial up by at least 15dB to get it back up to the same volume it was producing in Bypass mode.
Does it really take that much more power to produce the Dolby signal as apposed to Bypass?
The signal path is very different in Bypass and in other modes. The signal is being converted from analog to digital, processed by the DSP, divided into more channels, and then converted back to analog. It's not really a case of surround processing modes requiring more power as it is a result of the differing signal path.
One thing that I wonder about... Did you calibrate your audio levels for each channel? Not doing so (or being off in the calibration) wouldn't yield a 15dB difference in level between stereo and surround, but if the center and surrounds were a bit lower there could be a few dB of difference.
While I'm at it - is there a reason you aren't using the digital output from the cable box. Cable boxes aren't known for their quality DAC's, so unless you have one of those cable boxes that doesn't always provide a digital output (some of the older Scientific Atlanta boxes are this way, and don't provide digital output from some analog cable channels) I'd recommend using the digital output if one is available.
Originally posted by squebel:
Also, I don't have any surround back speakers and have them set to "none" in the config. Am I supposed to still get the PLIIx options?
Without back surrounds, Pro Logic IIx and Pro Logic II are identical. PLIIx only needs to be identified separately once you have a 6.1 or 7.1 setup.