Low-sensitivity speakers — What's special about them?


I'm building a system for a smaller room (need smaller bookshelves), and I did a bunch of research and some listening. I am attracted both to the Dynaudio Evoke 10's (heard locally) and the Salk Wow1 speakers (ordered and I'm waiting on them for a trial). I have a Rel 328 sub.

Here's the thing — both of those speakers are 84db sensitivity. Several people on this forum and my local dealer have remarked, "You should get a speaker that's easier to drive so you have a wider choice of power and can spend less, too."

That advice — get a more efficient speaker — makes sense to me, but before I just twist with every opinion I come across (I'm a newbie, so I'm pathetically suggestible), I'd like to hear the other side. Viz.,

QUESTION: What is the value in low sensitivity speakers? What do they do for your system or listening experience which make them worth the cost and effort to drive them? Has anyone run the gamut from high to low and wound up with low for a reason?

Your answers to this can help me decide if I should divorce my earlier predilections to low-sensitivity speakers (in other words, throw the Salks and Dyns overboard) and move to a more reasonable partner for a larger variety of amps. Thanks.
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@larry5729  I will. I’m glad you think the Salks will be good. I went listening today to some amps... and heard some Spendor A4s and some Elacs S61. They didn’t do much for me, though they sounded good. Looking forward to getting the Salks, someday. I ordered them Jan 9. 
With the vast majority of typical speakers one can make a speaker's impedance more linear by lowering it's impedance, which can allow amplifiers to provide a more linear frequency response through those speakers. But doing so will decrease the speakers sensitivity.

One will be hard pressed to find high sensitivity speakers that can produce respectable step response or square wave response.


There's a lot more to speakers than sensitivity alone.
Thanks, unsound. That helps me make a bit more sense of the measurement which the page for the speakers I ordered list. I bought them for the reputation and reviews --and the notion they'd be sized well for my listening room, which was confirmed by the maker. It was only later on that I realized the sensitivity was low. Here are the stats/landing page for that speaker. http://www.salksound.com/model.php?model=WOW1
@timlub --

What it comes down to is... really good mids with any type of top end extension without cone break up is hard to find in true high sensitivity speakers.

Perceived really good mids and upper range extension (i.e.: "any type of top end extension" leaves room for quite a lot) is readily available with true high sensitivity speakers - without necessarily requiring exotic cone materials. Being so I gather cone break-up, in whatever shape it may present itself (or not), isn't an issue. 

@unsound --

One will be hard pressed to find high sensitivity speakers that can produce respectable step response or square wave response.

Question is whether it holds significant correlation in regards to perceived sound quality, not least depending on who you're asking. There's hardly consensus here, but transient behavior in (time aligned) all-horn set-ups, representing the best efficiency, are hardly the ones to fault the most in this regard. Even so, relevance/correlation is required. 

There's a lot more to speakers than sensitivity alone.

Sure, but I'll definitely side with poster @alexberger's above posts on the significance of high sensitivity (and headroom) as an aspect highly overlooked by the audiophile community at large, and that it's an essential ingredient in achieving a live sound imprinting. Those who've heard a well-implemented all-horn system covering most of the audible range will know this kind of sonic ignition, scale, presence and ease simply doesn't exist in low to moderately sensitive speakers; they just sound restrained and malnourished by comparison, not that they can't be highly capable in other areas. Yes, high efficiency and full-range requires BIG size, but you want to eat your cake too that's the pill to swallow. Personally I find it's definitely worth it. 
That aspect @phusis "a live sound imprinting" is significant. Thanks for putting it that way. Another, good metric to judge speakers by; very useful.