Which speakers have the biggest soundstage


Hi all, I'm using a Cary sli-80 integrated amp with 40w. I want to upgrade my speakers. All I'm looking for is a huge 3D dimension but nothing else. Which brand would you choose from? My price range is within $3500 used and at least 92 sensitivity
rbc
My soundlab m2's and dunlavy sc3's produced a large realistic soundstage for my listening room.
The new Magnepan 1.7s. They will play louder than you think with 40-50 watts of good power.
In my experience, most dipole speakers do an excellent job with soundstage. I've heard great examples with planar, electostatic and open baffle designs. This is a fundamental strength of most boxless designs. On the flip side these type of speakers (in general) have a harder time with bass and microdynamics. There is no perfect speaker. Pick your sound priority and find the speaker design that optimizes accordingly.
woow thx everyone for your suggestions. There're quite a lot of speakers I gotta try!!

Unfortunately I wouldn't add any room treatment nor replace any other equipments except my speakers.

How about the Zu Essence and Tyler acoustic D3 or acoustic zen adagio?
Speakers that image well and flourish in a large room will have the biggest sound stage because the room is bigger mostly.

OHM Walsh speakers typically image from wall to wall in any size room. The larger the room, the wider the soundstage.

mbls perform similarly and have the deepest and most 3-d soundstage I have heard when set up right in a large room with lots of room behind them.

I've heard Maggies set up optimally in a mid-room configuration create a room filling soundstage. Other planars set up similarly probably do the same.

I've also heard a stereo pair Martin Logan and Focal speakers set up near the front wall holographically fill a large acoustically lively rectangular room quite holographically with much of the sound seemingly coming from the rear of the room

I've also heard Dynaudio monitors set up wide and mid room along the long dimension of the room fill the most of the room with an an accurately defined soundstage from wall to wall.