Bookshelf Speakers in Ceiling Corners?


This is for the living room, where the combination of toddler destruction and spousal negotiation has landed me here: speakers lying sideways, each on its own shelf against the front wall, about 8 inches down from the ceiling and 8 inches in from either side wall. The associated equipment is good enough, but not great: Arcam A65+ Integrated and an older NAD cdp. I only expect this to be a good mid-fi system, a setup for mostly acoustic music that sounds detailed at low-to-medium listening levels without muddy, booming bass. Ideally, I would like to pair whatever ends up in those corners with a musical sub and call it a day for $500-600. Can it be done? Thanks for your thoughts.
ocbu9094

Potential to sound very good up there, ever been to a record store with speakers up high?

in my fam room i have 6 in monitor speakers on top of armoirs, tops are about 8 in from ceiling, 8 in from side walls and the backs are about 6 in from the wall. the sound is excellent! 

some KEF LS50 using the fully plugged port option on shelves would be perfect.  also there are some JBL speakers designed to be mounted thst high.  

like being at a concert, enjoy.  

How about some Gallo A'diva's?

http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/gallo4/ti.html
I'd go Bose acoustimass in this situation....the satellites have almost nothing below 120 Hz so not much modal issues right in the corner. Bose are a good design for a half decent sound in crazy placements.
There's similar bass gain at the upper corner of a room as there is in the floor+ corner.

I would put in the effort to tilt the speaker down enough to have some sound stage and imaging at your preferred listening position. I've heard speakers mounted and adjusted this way and it can work surprisingly well.

During the evolution of my home theater, back when my son was small, I had safety cables attached to the large bookshelf speakers mounted on the side and rear walls. This was not only for the safety of my child, but also because one side channel was directly above my (then) Versa Dynamics turntable.

There are professional speaker mounting systems designed for various loads and speaker sizes. I would factor that into system cost no matter what else you do.

Someday your toddler could be helping you wire up a new pair of floor standing speakers for this same room. Then the two of you can sit down and enjoy the upgrade together.
The positioning is very tough. If you want to avoid boom you'll need to avoid large (and even medium-sized) woofers and anything back-ported unless it's been specifically designed to work up against the wall.

If it were me I would email George Short at North Creek and ask him if the North Creek Echo would work in this application.

http://www.northcreekmusic.com/

Another thing I would do is reconsider the sub. For lasting satisfaction, that money would probably be better spent on upping the quality of the main speakers.