Will Klipsch Forte IV's Work In A Smaller Room?


I need a quality pair of high sensitivity speakers, and a used pair of the Klipsch IV's will fit my budget. 

My room is 12x5 by 9.5. I would place the Forte IV's on the long wall, about 7.5 to 8 feet apart (depending on how critical the distance to the side walls is), and 12-18 inches out from the corners. My listening position would be 8 feet away, at the tip of  a pyramid formed by the speakers and the seating position. 

 

Any expertise, thoughts and recommendations appreciated. 

nightfall

8wpc - very limited high sensitivity speaker options within budget.  Likely Klipsch is best option, then try to get it to work with the room the best you can.

Agree Razz would be a significant step up. 

You could make it work at midfield distances.

If you are set up on the long wall of 12.5 ft,

Pull them 1 ft from front wall and leave around 4.5 feet behind seat and back wall. Such a listening position would position the listener out of some some problematic lengthwise modes in the room. It would imply a 7 feet midfield listening distance from the speakers, which is enough distance for the drivers to sum properly. Corner loading is a hindrance to perceivable resolution. Hence, don't put the Klipsches on the corners and set them up 6 feet apart, resulting in a 6-7-7 isosceles triangle.

Place a sub each on each sidewall behind your seat to address widthwise nulls. The subs can be good performance micro subs like the kef kc62 for the small room.

Play with toe-in until you get a good amount of envelopment working with the space behind you. 

 

I bought my kid a pair of bookshelves, 2 ways with a 6.5” woofer and in his 9x11’ room bass was overwhelming. Was it flat?, neutral? Nope, was it fun h e l l yes.

A couple of years ago I made a wood structure that tied my Cornwalls together precisely as to toe-in and distance between the speakers as well as distance to the rear wall. Everything was linked together on a common track so that all variables could be duplicated precisely and in unison by measuring against the back wall with a spring coiled tape measure.

Each speaker was linked to the track at at a hinged back corner which became a pivot point for toe-in. It was then that I gained an appreciation for precise speaker placement without wrangling with tape markers and all the rest of it. If you can adjust speakers accurately without having to fuss with it, then you are more likely to play with variables to your heart’s content and get a feel for what is going on in your room.

My listening room has pine floors to which the apparatus could be attached.