Best speakers for a small room


Hello all, I'm looking for recommendations for best speakers for a small room. Room is 125 square feet with 10 foot ceiling. 10k budget.  Ideas?

128x128jazzguy1958

What amp will you use with them? What are your sonic priorities? 

In general, smaller speakers will work best. Setup will be a big consideration. Most speakers sound much better pulled out at least 3ft. from the front wall. So if that's not an option, avoid rear ports especially, and look for designs made to be used near the wall. Their aren't many but there are a few good ones. Larsen and Audio Note are the first that come to mind. Many Devores work well in smaller spaces. 

The more you share about what you prioritize, the more helpful the responses will be. Cheers,

Spencer 

Dynaudio Heritage Special, you can now get them with the stand 20 included which I highly recommend.  But, just my opinion.

Not a big room to fill and dimensions may not be optimal so I would narrow it down by keeping budget under $1000. KEF LS50 or similar sized passives or small powered nearfield studio monitors.

Where are you sitting in the room? How far can you place the speakers from the back wall?  How far away are you sitting from the speakers?  Can you sit facing diagonally reducing the direct reflections (for the best sound)?   Is this a dedicated listening room or a multi-purpose room?  How loud do you want to play and what music do you listen to?

Altec VOTT A7s would allow you to listen to music from the inside out but not very practical. Depending upon the source you're going to power them with the Omega Super Alnico High Output Monitor could work very well.

Small rooms have two issues: First, the reflection path lengths are short, and that’s bad because early reflections are more likely to be detrimental than later-arriving ones. Second, the smaller the room, the larger and more audible the room-induced bass region peaks and dips tend to be.

A combination of narrow and well-behaved loudspeaker radiation patterns and early-reflection-avoidant speaker setup can reduce the amount of undesirable early reflections. Room treatments can help, as long as they don’t ruin the spectral balance of the reflected energy by overly-absorbing the highs.

Small rooms tend to reinforce the bass region moreso than large rooms, so having a means of adjusting the amount of in-room bass energy can be helpful. In my opinion too much bass is more distracting than not enough bass.

In general smooth bass is "fast" bass, and the in-room bass energy can be smoothed via EQ, bass trapping, or a distributed multisub system. Which if any of these approaches make sense depends on the specifics.

Danager mentions diagonal set-up and big Altec speakers. The big Altecs have very good radiation pattern control, and a diagonal setup geometry can reduce the amount of energy in the early reflections. And if you can introduce some asymmetry such that each of the speakers is a different distance from the two nearest walls, that can help with room interaction in the bass region.

Of course the big Altecs are probably impractical for a small room at least here in the USA, but not necessarily in Japan!  I mention them because they have the sort of radiation pattern that I believe can work well in a small room. 

Duke

speaker manufacturer