Speakers to hang on to for LIFE


After 9 years with my Proac Response 3s, I recently decided to change speakers. As you can tell, I'm not an upgrade fever patient. I want something I can live with for years & I think the best advice I'm gonna get will be from those who have & are still living with their speakers for an extended period of time. Please tell me why too. Thanks.Bob.
ryllau
Is this thread really 10 years old? :0

For me, my Epos ES11's -- which they will have to pry out of my cold, dead hands. I have never heard them make a 'mistake.' And I have been listening to them for 7 or 8 years.

Terry
Canuhearthat,
If he changed the woofers, they are no longer the same speakers as they were designed to be. And it appears that you paid way too much.
I'm a working class man, and all of my equipment has been budget hi-fi, as they say. I'm using a NAD Viso 5 for a surround receiver right now. I've used many speakers over the years, but keep coming back to my Image Concept 100s. I've had 'em since 1989, and they just sound better than other budget monitors. They cost $600 per pair in 1989. Now I have two pairs of them. I bought one set used on ebay. Damn they sound fine--the midrange is nearly flawless with a good recording. A bad recording sounds like a bad recording.

Sad to say, the Image brand is a thing of the past. But these little wonders live on in my living room.
Polk Lsi15. I have had the urge to 'upgrade' for 9 years. But there is nothing out there that would be an 'upgrade'. Sometimes we have to accept the fact that we did it right the first time. Which is what the OP's post implies.
When I was a kid I hung out at a place called The Stereo Studio here in the Chicago area. My first pair of brand new loudspeakers were purchased there one night at a "Midnight Madness" sale. I bought a pair of AVID 102a bookshelf speakers for $119.00 ea. plus tax. Today those little gems are in my garage where they serve me well while cooking out or just sitting outside with my wife and son. Not hardly the BEST sounding speakers I've ever heard but very decent little bookshelf speakers never the less. I was just a kid at the time and couldn't afford the high end listening room. But I zoned in on a pair of KEF 105/2 Reference Speakers that just sounded so great powered by a pair of big Audio Research Power Amps and eventually I took them home. They are still with me 33 years later, crossovers freshly rebuilt, woofers re-coned and they sound and still look terrific. A few years later I managed to score a pair of KEF 104/2 Reference speakers as well and I still have those too. There's just something about these loudspeakers... they are truly special to me. These will be with me until the very end.