Small-ish speakers for a very large room?


Hello,

I recently moved into a new condo which has a really large living room. The room itself is probably 35' x 17' with 12' ceillings; but the room is actually a partial loft - the wall opposite the stereo only goes up 7' leading into a 14' x 14' bedroom.

Needless to say, the room sounds pretty cavernous.

I have always built my stereo built around listening - I have a full Lineaum home theater (the Lineaum-brand 2-way tower speakers with the LX-5's as surrounds, and their "matching" center channel). Unfortunately, since I moved, everything just sounds anemic.

It's probably time for a change anyway - so I'm looking into a few different options. Unfortunately, I'm also on a tight budget.

How do people think that the Magnepan MMG's would do in a room this large? What other reasonably priced speakers would do well in a room so volumous?

I have no qualms with going with used speakers - I just want to spend less than $1000 for the pair and less than $500 for the matching center. I'm also not opposed to bookshelf speakers or speakers that would necessitate a sub for home theater.

Thanks in advance for everyone's advice.
hudsonhawk

Showing 2 responses by plato

To me, the MMG's would be too inefficient to work well in your situation, not to mention that they lack slam and impact in general.

I think I'd consider a pair of the Energy C-9 speakers. They're about 94dB/W efficient and have good range and impact. Since this is a discontinued model, I've seen them going real cheap on the web these days. You could probably pick them up for around $600 - $650/pr and that would be a great bargain.

I use the Energy C-7s in my home theater. They're in a somewhat smaller room and have worked out great for my needs. Energy makes a matching center too that shouldn't cost too much.
Oops, I see that you were looking for smaller speakers to fill your requirements. You can probably find some that will work to some degree, but I doubt that they'll work as well as larger speakers in a room the size of yours. So you may have to compromise on the overall impact and sound quality if you find smaller speakers to use.