That was a wise move with the Forte over the Heresy..   I like the Heresy but the Forte rocks and doesn't need a sub

I’d like to share my recent experience. The binding posts on my Klipsch Forte 4 are always coming loose. As I was planning to replace the cheesy pound-in metal caps (like you find on a chair leg) with spikes, I decided to open the binding post panel and tighten things up as long as the speaker was off its base.

This is what I found: 1. speaker wires were reversed on one of the woofer’s binding posts (positive on negative and vice versa). 2. Discovered that Klipsch is using .002 inch/thick stainless steel strips as "extenders", that bridge the distance from the binding post to the wire that goes to the crossover. These strips are approximately 3/4 X 1/4 inch (and .002, two thousands inch thick). I replaced these (8) strips with beefier solid copper copies. To my ears, the copper extenders made a world of difference. Sound is much less strident at volume, soundstage width and depth increased dramatically, sound is more natural and organic, and instrumental identity and imaging has improved.

As far as the always-loose binding posts, the easiest solution is to use banana plugs on your wire.

For spades, the most you can do is drop the BP panel (six screws) and tighten the inside nut of each post, with a small screw driver inserted in the hole of the outside post. This is as tight as it will ever be. I’d advise against Locktight as it may hamper contact and reduce the audio signal. Once the binding post assembly is tight, reassemble everything and NEVER tighten the large nuts more than finger tight when you connect your speaker wire (any tighter will just re-loosen the assembly).

IMO, this binding post design is, to be polite, bad engineering.

Please note: These improvements while using a 14 year old Onkyo HT receiver. I can't wait to hear what a good tube amp will sound like!

The good news is that the Forte 4s are much better speakers than I thought!

Some of these horn speakers are not kind to older or poorer recordings. I have lots in my collection, and prefer more forgiving speakers. However, for the right kind of music, I bet they sound great. They look nice too. The loose binding posts is more common occurrence than you think. Had to do the same on my wharfedale 225's...on the Tannoys, no such issue, you can crank on them all day long and they do not loosen. 

True one of the things I noticed auditioning the newer Fortes was poorer recordings  were laid quite bare while good ones sounded good,   More of a difference than usual I would say.