Small Room, Large Speakers... Help


I am moving into a new house in about a week. The good news is that I will have a dedicated listening room. I can do whatever I want with it. The bad news is that the room is only 15' by 8' by 7' high. The floor is carpeted and with nothing in the room, it is very slightly "lively" but nothing compared to a hardwood floor. There is a door opening into the room on the long wall. The worst news is that my speakers are pretty large: Cain and Cain IM BEN speakers with TWO active Bailey subwoofers. The C&C full rangers have a small, four inch full range driver and two backloaded horns stacked on top of one another. So it has two horn mouths one above, and one below the driver. The Bailey subwoofer is ported, side-firing, and has one ten-inch driver. It is designed not for the lowest of low bass, but for tight, musicality with low excursion.

My question is: will it be possible to set up this system in this room? Or must I move to the living room of the house and not have a dedicated room?

My plan is this: Set it up length-wise with the subs in the corners of the room with the driver facing out, the port facing the wall. Place bookshelves on each long wall approximately center of the wall across from one another. Set up the horns in front of the subs near the bookshelves, using the bookshelves to mitigate side reflections. Listening seat against the rear wall with the proper room treatment behind (do I use a diffuser or a damper?). This will place the full range drivers approximately 8 feet away from the listening position.

Is there any advice any experts can offer? Is there anything in particular I should definitely avoid? Any techniques that are "must-do" in a room like this? In this situation is it best to have the horns as far away as possible fro the listening position, or have the horns as far away as possible from the back wall.
tjkurita
As a general rule: you can make a small room sound big but you can't make a big room sound small.

With room treatment and some experimentation, you will do fine. I would suggest a live end-dead end strategy first. But, you will find what sounds best for you, not me or anyone elses taste.
Thanks for the input! You are both right. I jumped the gun. I am curious, however, if people have the same size room and say, "There is NO WAY it will work, don't even try." That would save me some grief. I can re-purpose the room in that case and not have to move these behemoth speakers around. But I won't know until I try, I suppose...
I agree with the previous poster. Try your system in the new house then decide if any changes are needed. With a dedicated room, you should have some flexibility with speaker placement, which should help minimize some of the speaker/room interface issues. That said, with the size of your speakers, they may over power the room acoustically and visually. But you will know if the do.
"Is there any advice any experts can offer?"

Yes. Since you already have the equipment and the room, the smartest thing to do would be to set the system up and listen to it.