Living audio set-up


Hi you all,

I want to upgrade my audio set-up (from a very basic with and old Pioneer amp and Polk speakers) and I have $8,500 to spend. I want to start choosing the speakers, but would also match them with an amp and a preamp. Some references:

- I used to listen to music with my turntable and my computer.
- I mostly like jazz and classical music.
- My living room size: 20x10 ft.

Would appreciate any help, considering some limitations: I'm from Chile and only some speakers could be found here (Revel, KEF, ATC, Harbeth, Dali)

Thanks :)
sebbasstian

Showing 2 responses by elliottbnewcombjr

1. Think long, future flexibility, options, desirable future additions now.

2. efficient speakers: sensitivity 1w/1m: 90 db or more.

IF you can find efficient speakers you love, THEN it will reduce your power needs. That will reduce: cost, size, heat; and increase: equipment choices, placement options.

AND, critically, with all those advantages: enable trying TUBE equipment.

3. bi-amp speakers capability, limits your choices, but increases your future flexibility.

4. sub(s) now or in the future. Video: 1 sub can add some dinosaur stomp. Music: I recommend a stereo pair of subs, no ports, front facing located adjacent to the mains, so fundamentals and their overtones can establish directionality. 

5. speaker placement flexibility. I advocate steady placement with easy movement, i.e. felt feet, plastic slip sheets, or wheels (if so, 3 wheels with anti-tipping corner blocks). Find ideal placement and ideal toe-in for you alone, and adjust toe-in for 2 listeners to get both a wider center and retain some l/r imaging

6. Buy, Keep, Return/Exchange Speakers. 

Any speaker, the very best, is designed for an imaginary space, and any speaker might sound great, good, or down right lousy in your space.

If you cannot listen first, find a seller with several viable options in your budget that will allow an evaluation, refund or exchange.

7. Existing Equipment, Better Equipment Later, according to the long range plan.

You can use your existing equipment to ascertain the new speakers sound in YOUR space, then later you change to better equipment so those speakers can reveal more of the source.
Lots of Glass: Side Walls?

Full Height Draperies or THICK Textured Fabric Vertical Blinds.

Not long runs, several sections so you can close some sections totally, some partially, leave some open.

The Vertical Blinds, you tilt the blinds so the sound absorbing, non-reflecting strips face the speakers, thus allowing light and vision at the reverse angle. Heavy, thus buy good quality tracks.

Now: the other side? Even if no windows, think thru if you need opposing treatment so the reflections/lack of reflections are equal.

Hint: you can wait, buy big heavy canvas drop cloths, use them as temp shields to decide what you want to do for real, i.e. spend real money on.