Set up on the long wall is the only way to go with them my friend. My room is similar in size to yours and this is what worked for me.
You'll need your listening chair on the back wall with some dampning material behind your head to make it work. space them about 8ft to 10 ft apart, the wider the better. My dunlavies are about 18 in from the back wall but you will need to experiment to get them right for your room, the same with toe in. Start with the speakers firing straight out and move them apart as far as you can while keeping center imaging intact. Don't move them too close to the side walls though (leave 3 to 4 ft) so you minimize side wall reflection. Then work on moving them in and out from the back wall until the bass is optimized, deep, not boomy etc. Then work on toe in to get the focus optimized with out making the sweet spot (which will remain pretty small) any smaller than it needs to be.
as to the amps you can try to use the aleph to drive the mids and tweaters with the bigger amp driving the bass and it may help provided the two amps work well together. I've heard the Dunlavies with a 60 wt aleph and they sounded pretty good so the Pass should drive the high end nicely. I'm feeding mine with VTL 185 monos that are rated at around 230 watts in tetrode. They sound great but i'd still like some more power for the bottom end.
You'll need your listening chair on the back wall with some dampning material behind your head to make it work. space them about 8ft to 10 ft apart, the wider the better. My dunlavies are about 18 in from the back wall but you will need to experiment to get them right for your room, the same with toe in. Start with the speakers firing straight out and move them apart as far as you can while keeping center imaging intact. Don't move them too close to the side walls though (leave 3 to 4 ft) so you minimize side wall reflection. Then work on moving them in and out from the back wall until the bass is optimized, deep, not boomy etc. Then work on toe in to get the focus optimized with out making the sweet spot (which will remain pretty small) any smaller than it needs to be.
as to the amps you can try to use the aleph to drive the mids and tweaters with the bigger amp driving the bass and it may help provided the two amps work well together. I've heard the Dunlavies with a 60 wt aleph and they sounded pretty good so the Pass should drive the high end nicely. I'm feeding mine with VTL 185 monos that are rated at around 230 watts in tetrode. They sound great but i'd still like some more power for the bottom end.