jbl k2s9800 seg wood grain keep or sell?


i just purchased a pair of jbl k2s9800 speakers for my home,i am not a audiophile by no means[not yet]however i love loud clear music,i have a basic onkyo reciever that puts out about 100watts. it sounded better with my old infinity sm150 speakers,should i buy a amp [if so what kind] the k2s9800 were recommened by a friend that is not avaiable for advise any longer,it seems to me the new speakers would be better suited for a concert hall, etc? they have networks,crossovers,bi-amp,all differant types of componants that i know nothing about?i am leaning towards selling them,but what catagory would suit them,what amount should i sell them for?[ i paid $13,500.00 a piece plus tax and shipping] i do realize i sound like a idiot [especially on this web site] but i am in a bind and really need some advise from you guys!! thanks corey
croweshead5215
The amp selection will be in tune with the music you listen to. If you think that the Infinitys sound better than these massive JBLs, than I have to guess that you might be into some rock or other demanding type of music. I would second Jond's choice of tube amps...for your speakers seem to be sensitive enough for them. Furthermore, I would add to the list some sort of pure Class A type of amps, like Clayton S40, with 40 pounding watts for sheer Class A, hot and dynamic power.

No HK or JBL amp, unless the HK is vintage, tube amps will make your speakers sing.

A good choice for tubed power amps are the Sonic Frontiers Power 1, 55watts per channel or the Power 2, at 110 watts, both will run you either between 1-2K respectively. If you chose the power 1, then you might have 1k left, which you can invest in a sort used tubed preamp. Should you chose to go this path, let us know how it works out.

PS: Other tube choices are VK60, BAT tubed amp or the VK200, pure Class A 100watts....around 2k-$1300 respectively.

No HK or JBL solid state amp will allow you to squeeze the best out of that system. JBLs sound either very accurate, but fatiguing in the long run, therefore you need to make you that you get gear that will not add to the brightness or tizziness that those exotic drivers can produce.
I have a friend who owns the K2's. ( S5500 ). They must be the biggest two-way monitors ever made! My experience with the K2's is that they require very high power amps although their sensitivity might suggest otherwise.

I have * seen * pictures of three systems with K2's, one using Levinson 33 amps , second with 4 rowland amps - active , third with two 300W mac's & stellavox's for the highs .Even my friend is using a Mac 350w amp which he plans to bi-amp with another. I have also seen the owners manual in which they recommend up to 300w amps in bi-amp config.

Most of the K2 systems i have seen are very complex using multiple amps , external crossovers & driven in active mode etc. I guess you need to do all this to get them
to sound their best. I don't mean to put you off with all the complexities you can very well try a simple tube amp as suggested & see if it's your cup of tea.Good luck.
This is a perfect example of why not to have a website[harman.com] where someone can buy 30000.00 speakers by dropping them into a shopping cart and proceed to pay with a credit card. If I would have had 5 minutes to tell him he would have been better suited buying the best in the HT section of "best buy", he would be 27,500.00 richer.

Im going on my 3rd pair of K29800s in 3 months and have tried several amp combinations with them. The most response I got from them was in a single amp bi-wire configuration with the crossovers fully to the right using a bridged Cello Duet 350 for each speaker. Even though the speakers are VERY efficient they do prefer to be provided excessive amounts of power. I found the sweet range to be in the 400-800W range. They sounded good with many different sounding amps including Cello, B&K, JBL Synthesis, Meridian Amps. Im not really sure what to say other than I am a bit upset he is willing to pay 30K for speakers and 1k for the amp. That equates to a 5000.00 pair of speakers getting a 166.00 amp.....? Get real! Get a HTIB.
Jbl_user,
Good response! I read a rave review of these speakers in HiFi+ magazine a while back and it really piqued my interest. I hadn't really considered JBL in the context of high end sound but I was obviously wrong. Just wondering have you tried any high-powered tube amps with your speakers? I mean something really beefy like some of the bigger models from VTL? I'm a confirmed tube fan and just think with an extremely flat/neutral speaker like the K2 tubes can inject just the right touch of warmth. Anyway thanks for the contribution, it's always good when a real user of the product in question can step forward.
Jond, there seems to be a segment of JBLs, especially with horn loaded mid/tweeters and a large woofer that are sold overseas, especially Japan and Europe, that do not get to see the light of day in the US, because JBL or Harman Corp has decided that for the US market, they can sell junkie speakers that meet a certain point. Once in a while, you can see these overseas JBLs appear in Audiogon and even used, they can easily run you around 3K a pair, for the last pair I saw.

PS: Never thought that these JBLs were that power demanding. Of course, relative sensitivity means squat if the impedance curve of the system is not benign for amp at hand.