Looking for warm sounding speakers


Looking for upgrading my present speakers (ADS L 1090) with something more modern. My preference is tilted towards warm sounding laid back speakers not aggressive in the mid range and not hyper detailed.
Electronics consist of RA opus 21 cdp, Symphonic Line Tube preamp and SS amp (130W/ch).

Want to remain in < 3K price range used or new.
Thanks

nakolawala
Reynaud's have a natural warmth that doesn't get in the way of transparency or timbre. They are lesser known for lack of US dealers but worth seeking out if have a chance.
Aerial 7B's were quite like what you're describing, at least to my ears when I listened to them. I found that surprising because I had been under the impression that metal domed tweeters resulted in harshness. However, the 7B's have metal domed tweeters and were certainly NOT harsh at all to my ears. These probably could be had for around what you're looking to pay. Overall I thought that they were a VERY nice speaker when I listened to them. And of course, Aerial's a stellar company. Based on your stated sonic preferences I'd give these a strong recommendation for auditioning, if at all possible.

Addendum: I VERY STRONGLY AGREE with what Brownsfan said:

"I think you will want to listen before you buy."

Also, Like Brownsfan, I've had great prior experience with ADS speakers. Mine were 2-ways deployed in the door of our 1995 Windstar (may it rest in peace). Those had great midbass punch, were smooth and had good detail. So if you're looking to replace the ADS ONLY because you're looking for something more modern, then.....well, it's up to you but I'd certainly at least listen (preferably in your own system) before pulling the trigger on anything. Even if you're replacing them because they're starting to fall apart, I'd still listen to anything before buying it. My guess is that there's a very good chance that you're "spoiled" by what you have already.
Those dunlavy scIII's in Cherry might work well for you if you can give them some room to perform.I ran a pair with Cary slam 100 mono's and McCormack DNA-1 monoblocks;when using the solid state amps the scIII's performed extremely well with a tubelike presentation but not the equal of the Cary's as one would expect.
Harbeths (SHL5s at least) are certainly warmish, or certainly not cold/analytical at all, but at the cost of some detail/reach into the music, to my ears.
If you are asking this question because you have been burned by too-much-info speakers be careful not to swing too far in the other direction. Balance is usually always the key, I think.