Well I've sold the Grand piano's at one time on a retail level. personally, for your needs/situation, I would strongly consider other alternatives, even higher sensitivity speakers. Yes the Piano's are smooth, rather neutral in palate(I think a tad cooler than the slightly warmer B&W's personally, maybe even more towards "Thiel neutral" in coloration), and clear sounding speakers. Overall, I like them in the right application. I do however find the Piano's work best as a more agressive speaker in a smaller room set up, where you can PLACE THEM PROPERLY FOR BEST BALANCE/RESPONSE IN THE ROOM HOWEVER(critical), but/and/or you can set em up where you are hearing more dirrect sound from the speaker than you are proximaly in relation to the walls/ceiling/first reflections!...which will blur the image, color the sound, etc. So, in a smaller room,you'd be acoustically closer to the speakers dirrect sound than you are to hearing the delayed reflections mixed with the sound...otherwise, this "open architecture" layout of tweeter ontop of mid/bass drivers is not as effective for what you want. (note: THX select allows use this basic speaker config in small rooms,or where you sit close to the main speakers!
However, in your case(assuming reasonablly lower ceiling heights in your room) with a large room situation, you are likely to get too much mixing of the delayed reflections in the room mixing with the dirrect sound from your Piano's(if used, or any other speaker reallyl), effectively mucking up your sound. Diappolito's and more controled dispersion speakers are going to be more flexible longer rooms, but it depends.
Still, that said, the piano's are a rather laid back sound a bit(depending on mix of gear), and are LOWISH SENSITIVITY. What that most always equates to(*even though you SHOULD BE SETTING THEM AS SMALL ON YOUR PRE/PRO) a lessdynamically nimble/foreward/involving sound than you cam potentially get from higher sensitivity/more efficient speaker offerings!(note commercial cinema speakers range from high sensitivity/efficiency horn speakers to even more efficient active horn speaker systems that are multi-amped!!...home audio speakers in themselves can't even appoach the kind of dynamic pressence/prowess that these types offer in general.
In their defense however(home audio gear) you are dealing with a smaller acoustic space, where you are likely to be sitting acoustically closer to your speakers, with much much lower volume demands, and you SHOULD BE crossing over your main speakers to an active powered sub, effectively bi-amping your speaker system, which helps dynamic ability greatly! Running the likes of your Piano's as "small" takes a great dynamic responsibility off your amp, and lets the much more dynamically able powered sub(s) take the heat!
So, I'm not saying you can't get great results with those for your needs, but it might be tricky, and the results would probably be marginal for what I'd call "special" and/or "fantastic" HT/music performance!
Let me put it to you this way...if you're a rocker, loud listener, heavy dynamic feind, home theater buff, whatever, you need more muscle and dynamic prowess I think. The Piano wasn't necessarily designed with this in mind.
Could you make that speaker work really well?...I could. But then I've been doing it for 15 years religiously for a living/hobby! Most couldn't.
You could much much much easily get the results you're looking for with other choices is all I'm saying.
If you're like me, and you want audiophile grade transparancy, detail, soundstage, but want killer dynamics(wich most home rigs don't offer sadely), I think you have other choices.
Also, the CAP100*(which I'm familiar, as I've owned many Classe amps) is going to offer lower power for 4/6 ohm speakers. I, on a few occasions blew drivers in my Theil 2.3's using CA150's at more agressive levels in the past! Those amps aren't as strong as the ratings indicate...that's what I've found. They say they double, but I doubt it!!
Anyway, I'd want to know the layout of your room, before making any solid recommendations. What's your room layout/dimmensions look like?
However, in your case(assuming reasonablly lower ceiling heights in your room) with a large room situation, you are likely to get too much mixing of the delayed reflections in the room mixing with the dirrect sound from your Piano's(if used, or any other speaker reallyl), effectively mucking up your sound. Diappolito's and more controled dispersion speakers are going to be more flexible longer rooms, but it depends.
Still, that said, the piano's are a rather laid back sound a bit(depending on mix of gear), and are LOWISH SENSITIVITY. What that most always equates to(*even though you SHOULD BE SETTING THEM AS SMALL ON YOUR PRE/PRO) a lessdynamically nimble/foreward/involving sound than you cam potentially get from higher sensitivity/more efficient speaker offerings!(note commercial cinema speakers range from high sensitivity/efficiency horn speakers to even more efficient active horn speaker systems that are multi-amped!!...home audio speakers in themselves can't even appoach the kind of dynamic pressence/prowess that these types offer in general.
In their defense however(home audio gear) you are dealing with a smaller acoustic space, where you are likely to be sitting acoustically closer to your speakers, with much much lower volume demands, and you SHOULD BE crossing over your main speakers to an active powered sub, effectively bi-amping your speaker system, which helps dynamic ability greatly! Running the likes of your Piano's as "small" takes a great dynamic responsibility off your amp, and lets the much more dynamically able powered sub(s) take the heat!
So, I'm not saying you can't get great results with those for your needs, but it might be tricky, and the results would probably be marginal for what I'd call "special" and/or "fantastic" HT/music performance!
Let me put it to you this way...if you're a rocker, loud listener, heavy dynamic feind, home theater buff, whatever, you need more muscle and dynamic prowess I think. The Piano wasn't necessarily designed with this in mind.
Could you make that speaker work really well?...I could. But then I've been doing it for 15 years religiously for a living/hobby! Most couldn't.
You could much much much easily get the results you're looking for with other choices is all I'm saying.
If you're like me, and you want audiophile grade transparancy, detail, soundstage, but want killer dynamics(wich most home rigs don't offer sadely), I think you have other choices.
Also, the CAP100*(which I'm familiar, as I've owned many Classe amps) is going to offer lower power for 4/6 ohm speakers. I, on a few occasions blew drivers in my Theil 2.3's using CA150's at more agressive levels in the past! Those amps aren't as strong as the ratings indicate...that's what I've found. They say they double, but I doubt it!!
Anyway, I'd want to know the layout of your room, before making any solid recommendations. What's your room layout/dimmensions look like?