Needing to replace thirty year old speakers.


I have a thirty year old pair of Canton ergo 80 speakers. I 

never felt they were that good. My current system includes

a Chronus magnum dark integrated amplifier, a Cambridge 

audio can v2 streamer and two Svs 2000 pro subs. The

Chronic dark replaced an Adcom 555-2 amplifier and an

Adcom 565 preamplifier. I always thought the Adcom 

equipment sounded harsh in the upper midrange. The

Chronic solved that problem. It is better than the Adcom

equipment in every way. I like speakers that are slightly 

warm sounding but still give detail. My budget is around 

$5,000, maybe a little more. What speakers would sound

good with my setup? If a recommended speaker allowed 

Me to delete the subs, my wife would be happy 😊 

mbruflodt25

Since my last post, I have today seen there are suggestions being made to look at High Efficiency Speakers. The following is well worth considering, especially trying to learn what a Interface will be like, if a HE Speaker is the selected design.   

Note: When HE Speakers are used, the most likely outcome will be any level of noise developed upstream will become audible. Depending on the interference, the noise is possibly able to be audible to the point it is quite unattractive as a constant present noise. High Volume Levels selected for listening may be the only temporary masking of the unwanted noise.

I am a HE Speaker user and am an advocate of them to be used, as a Speaker they are thoroughly enjoyed. Along with this I am not having to live with an audible noise produced elsewhere within the system.

 

+1 patrickdowns

I would add that actually listening to speakers is crucial. If one buys a speaker off recommendations of others (some being salespeople) you won’t arrive at the sound you like. It’s always helpful to take road trips or plane rides even if you have to schedule a couple listening sessions when you went to this city for something else.

Speakers really do set the stage for the actual sound or tonal signature the rest of your system gives you.

 

@2psyop - So true, and it’s so difficult for many people! Not that many dealers out there (I live 2 hours from a major city, but many people are much further), and often the one with the speakers you’re interested in doesn’t carry amps/preamps etc that you own or want, to do some system matching. The guy who sold me my Treo CTs bought a pair of $40,000 speakers from Germany (there is one US distributor/dealer) that he never auditioned, and decided on them after a recommendation by his hi-fi "guru". That is a leap of faith! Fortunately, he is very happy with them, but I don’t have the courage nor the dough to do something like that. So, we depend on trusted sources and reviews, and hopefully auditions, but getting that synchronicity in your system between components can be tricky. 

mbruflodt25 - your best course of action should be to go to Denver and demo speakers at High-End Audio stores - there are several with many brands mentioned.  Worth it for the next 30yr investment 😉

 

@mbruflodt25 wrote:

I have a thirty year old pair of Canton ergo 80 speakers. I 

never felt they were that good.

So the problem has always been the speakers, and whether they're 30 years old, 50 or 2 months is effectively irrelevant. However time and again we're plastered with the "buy new speakers"-advice that adheres to the mantra that buying new will make your day. It's certainly good for business, but as the buying incentive for the audiophile that is also wholly irrelevant. 

My advice: buy used, and get the most of your $5k budget. Not least: do some research, go listen to speakers where you can and see if it points you in the direction you need to go. Spending $5k for used speakers can get you some pretty cool stuff if you know where to look and what to look for.