Best in-ceiling speakers for audio


I have searched this forum and it seems most folks use in-ceiling speakers for surrounds in home theatre applications.

I need some in-ceiling speakers for an audio application. It is a bit strange because I have a room that's about 15' wide and 20' long, and the speakers have to be about 15" to 30" off one of the 15' long walls. Listening will be mostly on the other side of the room, not quite 20' away. It is a family room, so no one "listening position" per se. The ceiling is about 11' high.

Most of the in-ceiling speakers I have seen mentioned here are round and point straight down. I'm not sure that would be optimal here. I have checked out some Definitive Technologies UIW RCS II, which look like they "point" the sound in one direction.

Any idea if these speakers are any good? Any other recommendations?
mattya

Showing 1 response by john_z

I'm running a pair of Triad 8" Omnirounds in my 10' by 18' by 8' high kitchen ceiling and they provide nice sound overall. Although they point "straight down", you can pivot the tweeter a few degrees to help with aiming the highs. Triad makes quality speakers throughout their line and are noted for their "architectural speakers" where placement or aesthetics is a challenge.

Their 8" size provides respectable bass, although you could add a sub like Rives suggests. I sometimes engage the "loudness" circuit on my receiver when playing them at modest volume and they sound suprisingly rich even without a subwoofer. One of the best features of the Omnirounds is they are designed with a closed back, which prevents sound bleed-through to the upstairs and provides a more predictable sound than open-back designs.

I power mine with a 100W Arcam 10P amp, but they are efficient enough that you could drive them with less, esp. if you have a powered subwoofer in the mix. Good luck with your system!

P.S. I used 14 guage 4 conductor speaker cable instead of 2-conductor pulled to each speaker to make sure they weren't starving since it was a fairly long run back to the amp., probably overkill but what the heck..