which speaker to buy


my son has a mcintosh 7300 and 2002 which he want's bridge so he will have 600 watts per chanell. he likes his music loud. he likes hard rock music. what speaker should he have??? i told him that here on audiogon forum many like the klipsh speakers, old or new. 
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actually, my son doe's have a pair of klipsh speakers. i don't know what model it is. only reason he want's to bridge is because he has no funds to buy an amplifier to suit his needs. he want's to bridge to see how much louder his klipsh speakers will go. when i went to see led zeppilin at the forum in l.a. ca. back in the 70's, it was loud! i think he want's to hear his music that loud!!!
Tekton.  Eric makes his speakers to capture the dynamics of a live performance.  Theres a video on you tube where he explains how he’d listen to live performances and then try to build his speakers to reproduce that style of dynamics.  Most, if not all of his speakers use large paper drivers that look like pro audio drivers for the midbass and bass frequencies. 
First, I am a Tekton owner. I have a set of towers that I like very much. At one time I pushed many others towards Eric's products. I no longer do that. I no longer recommend Tekton. Not for a purchase new anyway. 
Though the Tekton speakers are quite good for the money I no longer feel that they are a good company to do business with. It does not matter how good your product is if you can not complete orders. Many have waited months (or more) for just the grills that were purchased with the original order. Some orders for speakers without grills are taking 6 months or more to be delivered. Emails are not responded to and phone calls go unreturned. It seems between his IRL project, racing interest and life in general Eric is no longer able to keep up.
It doesn't matter how good a product is if your company is not there to support it. 
Here's where the "not for a new purchase anyway" part comes in. 
On the used market a 1 to 2 year old Tekton brings roughly 60% to 70% of original purchase price. I have seen them for less. I regularly watch the market because I WILL purchase used. You just have to decide exactly which one you want and watch for it. 
IF you really want to duplicate Zep level SPL then you need pro sound reinforcement drivers and mid / HF horns. You could look to the Dead and wall of sound and build it modular. I advise JBL pro level drivers. Budget for hearing aids.
Just because he can bridge doesn't mean he should.  For efficient speakers like Klipsch, he'll only be using a few watts at most before driving them to hearing damaging levels.  It's good to have that extra headroom for dynamics, but bridging them is a dumb idea.  If he goes for Klipsch, some of the more recent (III or IV) Heritage speakers would be the way to go in my opinion.  Klipsch will do loud and will rock out, but they are not the most refined speakers out there and may play loud, but may not sound that great when they're really loud.  I have owned and listened to a lot of Klipsch speakers and almost all of them hurt my ears at loud volumes.  I had a pair of KLF-30s that I really liked but those are hard to find and they have issues with the cabinets ringing and falling apart.

Legacy Audio as mentioned makes more refined speakers than Klipsch that can play very loud.  I had some Focus 20/20s and those were beasts and sounded noticeably better than the KLF-30s at high volumes.  I sold them eventually because they were just overkill for my space.  They were hard to let go.

I was considering some Zu Audio speakers recently but decided against it.  I talked to a number of people about them and the consensus was that they do very well with low watt SET amps but aren't necessarily a good match with higher powered amps (I have 180 WPC tube monoblocks).  I did not hear them and have no direct experience, so take that for what it's worth.  

The Tektons look "interesting".  I'll just leave it at that.