Which Speaker


Hi, I'm building my first set up and need some help deciding on a set of speakers, I don' have a ton of money to spend but I've narrowed it down to some speakers that are in a sale deal so I can get the best ones I can. The main input will be vinyl from a pro-ject debut carbon evo and the amp will probably either be a marantz pm6007 or yamaha As501 depending on the speaker. The options I have: KEF Q550, Q Acoustics 3050i, Fyne Audio F303, Yamaha NS-F350, Wharfedale Diamond 12.4, Dali Oberon 5, Bowers & Wilkins 603 and Monitor Audio 200 or 500.
The website does say I can enquire about others to see if they would do a deal for them, they have many options like KEF 750, Dali Opticon 5,Elac Debut F6.2, Monitor Audio Silver 6, Kudos x2 and Mission QX4 - I dont know if they would allow any of these but I can always ask.
Music wise I tend to listen to indie/rock/metal but also a bit of everything from across the board, good bass is important but I can always add a subwoofer in the future. I know the best thing to do would be to listen in person but with full lockdown due to Covid I cant.
I think thats all the information I can give, I know I've listed quite a lot of speakers but it's my first try I want to do it well, thanks in advance for your thoughts.
oliverben5672

Showing 4 responses by b_limo

Thats pretty much what I said earlier soix.

Monitor Audio Silvers and whichever sound signature you prefer with regards to yamaha or marantz...

@Oliver, where are hou getting these deals?  Thats pretty good if you are getting around 35% off new!

Hi Oliver.  Yes, do slow down a bit. You can research and figure it out in 2-3 weeks of research.

Its nice to work your way up through the tiers because it gives you better ears and more appreciation for the higher models that you might have overlooked if you just jump to the top at the start.  For instance, you get Monitor Audio Bronze and think they sound great.  So good in fact that you are willing to spend more to see how much better the Silvers are so you get Silvers and yes, they are better.  You listen to them for awhile and the upgrade bug bites again and you get Golds.  Now you’re talking!  You can appreciate the Golds, their refined sound and awesome build quality because you started with Bronze’s.
This approach though costs some $ because you will lose a little bit with each sale (even buying used and at good prices).  
Its also a good idea to try to make it to a level where you aren’t going to want to upgrade right away.  
If you are starting from scratch, you might want to look into a bluesound node 2i, an integrated amp with or without a dac and speakers (you can use the bluesound node 2i dac if you land an integrated with no dac.  Later on you can add an external dac for $200-$600 and have a nice upgrade at that point.)
So, bluesound, integrated, speakers, cables from bluejeans.  That would be my suggestion.  
If you could swing a Rega IO and a pair of Monitor Audio Gold GX100’s you’d be off to a really nice start...  I’d make sacrifices for a few weeks if I had to, as in use my phone with a 3.5 mm cord and no dac until I could get a Bluesound node 2i, then I’d use the dac in the Bluedound until I could get a better dac like a schiit bifrost multibit or whatever and then you’d be sittin pretty.

I think Monitor Audio Silvers would be my choice (and a good one!) in the lesser price range.  Q acoustics, kef, dali are all great speakers as well but I feel that the Silvers are best in that price point. I had some Gold GX50’s and loved them.  They are just built so well.  Silvers look to be really close.  The bolt thru drivers are a cool idea and unique to them.  Check out those bolts on the backs of the speakers.  Those contect to the drivers and hold the drivers in the cabinets that way.  The drivers, cabinets, internal wiring all looked really nice in my Golds, like really nice.

As stated above about the differences in the models, as you go up the line they get bigger and with more drivers / bigger drivers.

I’ve found that the 7” drivers can handle more abuse or louder volumes than the 5” drivers.  Take this into account... I had paradigm studio 60’s that had three 5 1/2” drivers.  I also had the Studio 20 which had one 7” driver.  Both were from the same generation, v5.  The 60’s sounded awesome and had slightly more dynamics at low to medium levels but the 20’s could play louder and stay composed at higher volumes than the 60’s.  Paradigm makes a studio 100 that uses 4 of the larger 7” drivers which would have overloaded my room so the only way to get “more” within the brand was to move from Studio 20’s to S2’s.

Point is, if you like to crank it up at times, the 7” drivers are better.  If you are always listening at quiet to medium volumes, sometimes the 5” versions are better because all other things equal, the smaller driver will be faster and the thinner front baffle can produce better imaging.  A thin, tall speaker is pretty sexy too.

I don’t think you have to worry about much when buying speakers  preowned at this level (just do your due diligence with the seller) and I think you can save some $ doing it that way.  Preowned integrateds in the $500-$700 range aren’t going to offer much, if any, over something like a new Rega IO @ $500 and buying electronics new is reassuring (warranty etc).

When looking at speakers remember that stands are going to cost $150 so that eats into a savings you have with a standmount vs a floorstanding speaker.

Good Luck and have fun!