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Could be a set up thing. Could be excess humidity? Over-humidified guitars sound woolly.
What strings are you using?
As @Lewy said - it could be over humidified.
Otherwise I would get the guitar looked at by someone who knows what they are doing.
Yes they have copious bass.
If you're used to the low end of a different type of guitar, or to say a Mahogany back and sides, then a loud D-28 with all its Rosewood power may in comparison sound like something you personally call "woolly" where someone else would describe that increased low end differently.
Are you able to record something with both it and something else for comparison and share ?
Maybe, it's just the brightness of my other guitars making it sound super bassy.
I tried loads at the time I bought it and I didn't notice anything out of the ordinary. However, when you are at home you can really zone in on the sound of a guitar.
Something else to try - what happens if you tune the 6th up or down from E - still dull? How about if you tune the 5th string down to E...what does that sound like (obviously taking into account that it will be quite slack....) does that go woolly? A rough way of seeing if it's a resonance issue (unlikely but little effort involved in checking).
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for loose braces we normally - damp the strings and tap the top systematically with a knuckle all over but focus around the lower arm of the X brace area. Listen for differences like a dull thud or hollowness to the knock.
otoh - hows the saddle profile and seating ?, check it.