Tiny Room (6' x 9') speaker advice


Dear fellow Audiogon members

I have been an avid Audiogon reader over the past 10 years and have learned a lot from the community and have come to trust the advice I read on here over most other platforms.

Did a lot of listening during lockdown and I decided that I really like vintage audio.  I recently purchased a vintage HH Scott, Type 200 tube amp with separate Tuner, which are currently being reconditioned. 

In addition, I have a Thorens TD-145, which has an upgraded 8" Jelco arm and Ortofon 2M blue cart (plan to upgrade tot he bronze in the very near future).

For speakers I have the KEF LS50s that are currently connected to a Music Hall 15.3 50W amp (which is being replaced with the HH Scott). 

I want to replace the KEFs with speakers that at least look vintage, i.e. does not need to be vintage just want a wooden box like the Klipsch Heresy IV, Harbeth 30.1, etc. that have a large deep sound stage/excellent imaging.

I have heard and really like the Klipsch Heresy IV and the Harbeth 30.1. The issue as per the title, is that my listening room is tiny. I actually had my system in several different locations in my home but being non-dedicated spaces it did not get nearly the use that it has in this small room.

I have searched the web, including all previous audigon posts, for the "best speakers" for small rooms and the definition of a small room is very subjective (i.e., I have read several posts where it was defined as 15' x 15' or smaller). The best I could come up with is speakers for near field listening, most of which are low sensitivity and not ideal for a 12W tube amp (that said the KEFs can easily reach levels that are well beyond comfortable using the Scott before I sent it to be reconditioned).

Right now my KEFs are approximately 4 ft apart, about a foot off the wall, and my head when sitting is about 6 feet away. They are current on isoacoustic stands on solid walnut shelfs that are bolted to the wall at ear level.

Now comes the question.

What speakers should I try to audition that fit the following criteria?

1. Wood vintage look.

2. Small enough for the room. Again I would go for the Heresy IV, which would fit, but I am sure are way to big for the space.

3. Open airy soundstage. I have a sound in my noodle that I keep searching for, which I can only describe as a Fender Strat played on a 65 Princeton Reverb. Again the Klipsch and Harbeth mentioned above came as close to what I imagine I am looking for as possible.

4. Finally, I would like to keep the price under $3K.

Thanks for your suggestions

Budd

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

munneuro

Showing 2 responses by oldhvymec

I just rebuilt  pair of Infinity Infinitesimals. The guy paid 400.00 for a nice looking pair. He bought new ribbon for the tweeters. I installed the ribbons, checked the DVC Watsons, surrounds and turned them 180 degrees. I replaced the tweeter caps and inductors and cleaned up all the LPad switched. I added a great pair of red copper 5 way binding post and rewired with OCC/silver.

They are 12" tall. 95% efficient at least.  What a great speaker and the rework paid big time.. I think the binding post and wiring were the biggest thing..

He uses First Watt gear.

I tested them with a MX110z and a MC225. 28 wpc

They filled my whole work shop 30 x 40 and I used a single BB sub. The sub is in a 8cf box. It uses a 12" firing up, a 15" firing down and an 18" HE passive radiator facing forward. 250 watts. :-) The drivers are 92 - 94%. 100db was pretty easy

The sub is behind me 5 feet away the speakers are in front 10 feet away.

About 800.00 total for the little Titans. He had used stands that were to short. He had some pavers he like. He glued three together and painted the pavers with the same color as the stands. Looked great. 30.00 for the construction goop and primer and spray paint. 

Great and they ARE from 1978 - 1980 or so.. Way ahead of their time and make quite a statement, Then and NOW..

I got a couple pairs stashed somewhere.. :-)

Regards

The Infinitesimal was a great little speaker, but the tweeter wasn’t a ribbon.

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OK you got me, I replaced the planar diaphragm. Trust me one looked like ribbon tinsel from a Christmas tree.

I like the cast aluminum case and hardwood caps. It was a super fun project.

I wonder what Danny at GR could do with them.. I’m gonna send him a set.

I have two pairs. One pair with a mismatched tweeter, wrong color but the right static resistance.

They look like they are ready for a fallout shelter, pretty friggin’ sturdy. :-)

GR Research has a real nice sounding unit just not retro. I like something that sounds exceptional too. Not just good. GR is one of a kind for sure.

https://gr-research.com/product/desktop-mini/

Pick your finish. I picked the best of everything.. 607.00. AND finished.

OP I got a few upgrades for a TD145 too. I usually keep 4-6 160s or 165s here for projects.. Ear plugs.. There is a tip.. 2.00 put them in the suspension springs..

Regards