Another vote for a sub woofer (I failed to mention earlier) with the Khorns. You would think those massive speakers with 15" woofers would produce deep base, but they really don't. I had 1 sub, but I read a lot here that say 2 are better. Might be more so with your room that is huge.
Speakers for a very large room?
Reader of posts for a few years but have not posted a serious question until now. Currently have McIntosh integrated tube amp with some old KEF speakers. While I enjoy it in my current setting, I am moving to a house where my listening room will be 30' x 40' x 10'. It has polished concrete floors. Sounds like a grocery store but it is not. I suspect I will need to change speakers but really have no clue where to start. I listen mostly to progressive rock but also anything in the same general area. I don't know where to start with such a room? I am at least 3 hours from any major city. I did experience Treo CTs once and to bright for my ears and Wilsons but did not care for the visual appearance though liked the sound better. It was a few years ago so can't better define what I liked. Not a great resume of listening experience but it is what it is at this point. For some reason, which may be completely wrong, I am thinking electrostatic may work well in this setting. I could easily move them 5 feet out from the back wall but then again I really don't know what I am talking about. Any kind comments would be appreciated.
Rich
Rich
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- 48 posts total
I am in the same boat- new home being built will have a great room 42' x 25' with 14' ceilings and polished concrete. But it gets worse-one long wall is all glass. I have a pair of GE Triton 1's from my prior home that were amazing in a smaller room with full GIK treatments using REW. My plan is to use the Triton's on the short wall with a sofa/chair about 10' away in the sweet spot. The issue isn't to fill the room as much as to fill the listening area well enough. I plan on 2 additional subs to help achieve that. I will use large area rugs but I also expect that I'll need Dirac too with so many reflective surfaces. If my concern was to fill the space, I'd go with big constant directivity horns. The frequency response stays the same off axis, and if they are big enough, you get good sound without being in the typical sweet spot. The prior JBL synthesis suggestion is a good one though I still think you'll need additional sub's. I also second the Tektons. |
1) Ascend Acoustics Sierra Tower with RAAL: <$3000 shipped, more for custom finish. 2) Add a subwoofer(s): If you can do bass management and have RCA output for the sub, get a Rythmik (their subs have less distortion than Velodyne chats costing 3x as much). If you need to have speaker wire in/out, look to SVS. You want >12” for that space. |
For progressive rock my first choice would be ATC. The sheer force, power, and thrust they can belt out cleanly and without distortion makes them a great match for this type of music IMO. The downside is they do require some power to shine, so I doubt your Mac would be a good match. But if it were me in your situation, I'd get a Lyngdorf integrated for its room correction. In a room like that and if you don't have the ability to use a good amount of acoustical treatments, I think the benefits of room correction will far outweigh whatever other compromises there may be and you'll be thrilled with the results. I also agree with others that incorporating a couple good subs at some point is a must. Planar and electrostats are incredible at what they do, but IME they can't do the power, thrust, and oomph thing like good dynamic drivers such as those in ATC. Here's an example of a pair available here now just FYI... https://www.audiogon.com/listings/lis96f5j-atc-scm-40-gen-2-passive-satin-black-full-range?refsource... Anyway, hope this is somewhat helpful, and best of luck in your quest. |
- 48 posts total