Tiny Room (6' x 9') speaker advice


Dear fellow Audiogon members

I have been an avid Audiogon reader over the past 10 years and have learned a lot from the community and have come to trust the advice I read on here over most other platforms.

Did a lot of listening during lockdown and I decided that I really like vintage audio.  I recently purchased a vintage HH Scott, Type 200 tube amp with separate Tuner, which are currently being reconditioned. 

In addition, I have a Thorens TD-145, which has an upgraded 8" Jelco arm and Ortofon 2M blue cart (plan to upgrade tot he bronze in the very near future).

For speakers I have the KEF LS50s that are currently connected to a Music Hall 15.3 50W amp (which is being replaced with the HH Scott). 

I want to replace the KEFs with speakers that at least look vintage, i.e. does not need to be vintage just want a wooden box like the Klipsch Heresy IV, Harbeth 30.1, etc. that have a large deep sound stage/excellent imaging.

I have heard and really like the Klipsch Heresy IV and the Harbeth 30.1. The issue as per the title, is that my listening room is tiny. I actually had my system in several different locations in my home but being non-dedicated spaces it did not get nearly the use that it has in this small room.

I have searched the web, including all previous audigon posts, for the "best speakers" for small rooms and the definition of a small room is very subjective (i.e., I have read several posts where it was defined as 15' x 15' or smaller). The best I could come up with is speakers for near field listening, most of which are low sensitivity and not ideal for a 12W tube amp (that said the KEFs can easily reach levels that are well beyond comfortable using the Scott before I sent it to be reconditioned).

Right now my KEFs are approximately 4 ft apart, about a foot off the wall, and my head when sitting is about 6 feet away. They are current on isoacoustic stands on solid walnut shelfs that are bolted to the wall at ear level.

Now comes the question.

What speakers should I try to audition that fit the following criteria?

1. Wood vintage look.

2. Small enough for the room. Again I would go for the Heresy IV, which would fit, but I am sure are way to big for the space.

3. Open airy soundstage. I have a sound in my noodle that I keep searching for, which I can only describe as a Fender Strat played on a 65 Princeton Reverb. Again the Klipsch and Harbeth mentioned above came as close to what I imagine I am looking for as possible.

4. Finally, I would like to keep the price under $3K.

Thanks for your suggestions

Budd

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

munneuro

The Infinitesimal was a great little speaker, but the tweeter wasn’t a ribbon.

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OK you got me, I replaced the planar diaphragm. Trust me one looked like ribbon tinsel from a Christmas tree.

I like the cast aluminum case and hardwood caps. It was a super fun project.

I wonder what Danny at GR could do with them.. I’m gonna send him a set.

I have two pairs. One pair with a mismatched tweeter, wrong color but the right static resistance.

They look like they are ready for a fallout shelter, pretty friggin’ sturdy. :-)

GR Research has a real nice sounding unit just not retro. I like something that sounds exceptional too. Not just good. GR is one of a kind for sure.

https://gr-research.com/product/desktop-mini/

Pick your finish. I picked the best of everything.. 607.00. AND finished.

OP I got a few upgrades for a TD145 too. I usually keep 4-6 160s or 165s here for projects.. Ear plugs.. There is a tip.. 2.00 put them in the suspension springs..

Regards

but the tweeter wasn't a ribbon.

They are a true ribbon when you blow it and it delaminates.

I’d keep the KEFs or maybe upgrade to metas and feed it with a quality modern amp Like a Bel Canto c5i if it were me but…..

For more vintage I’d go with the heresy 3 or IV or a pair of Ohm Microwalsh  depending which way one rolls sound wise.  

 

Wow that’s a little room! My 1st thought would be sealed box. Maybe something with limited bass then add a smaller sub that has good room correction. 

I have heard great things about the Infinity Infinitesimal and BBC L3S/5A, but unfortunately being true vintage they are tough to find for audition.

How do you audition equipment for a room of your size at a dealer's place? Wouldn't the sound be completely different? Do you have a different way to audition?