First, he is a very lucky guy, as the amp is great! and will not be a problem, for any reason (other than the fact it is not in my listening room). His budget of 2K for speakers, and a preamp? Likely should buy a dac/preamp, like an inexpensive Topping (very neutral), and put the greater $ amount into speakers. Does he know the kind/type of listener he is? What is his room like? Seating location? Sources? Cables (balanced between pre and amp). Is he diving into this for the 1st time? I need to know.
speakers under $2k that work with Orchard Audio Starkrimson Stereo Ultra 2.5?
A guy on reddit posted audio forum that he won an Orchard Audio Starkrimson Stereo Ultra 2.5 (250w into 8 ohm, 500w into 4 ohm).
He's asking for speaker recommendations (and preamp) under $2k to get setup.
Leaving out used gear, i had a hard time finding speakers that fit without being overpowered by the amp. maggies was my first thought but this is his first entry point into a home system and i don't think he's got the space or dedication for maggies.
would love a few recommendations from you to pass along.
thanks!
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For $2k:
Preamp: Schiit Frey+ F or aKara (tubes or not)
Speakers: Tekton Lore especially if he is a rock fan (no stands needed) Sonus Farber Lunina or used Proac Tablettes if small size matters Magnepan LRS if reproduction of acoustic instruments and small jazz groups are key
the bookshelf and LRS will need a sub to be full range if that is desired. I own both the Lores and the LRS.
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TAS - Best Loudspeakers: $1,000 – $2,000 Chesky Audio stand mounts - great performance/price |
thanks all. PA speakers almost always provide RMS and max power specs, but home audio companies don't list that 'max power' information, just general recs for power requirements, as they don't want to turn anyone away and want to capture as many customers as possible. My misunderstanding was around the volume control. I had the impression that a speaker rated 50-100w at 4ohm would be incompatible with an amp that puts out 500w at 4ohm. I thought that the speaker still sees the majority of that power even at volume 0 or 1, that the power is just there and the volume control is just controlling volume, not watts. i understand that overpowering a speaker will first push the woofer to its mechanical limit, tweeters will likely not hit their mechanical or thermal limit. it makes sense that you would be able to hear when you're pushing too hard. but this person on reddit, the way he laid it out this is his first foray into audiophile type gear and i don't know if he'd pay attention to when a speaker is being pushed beyond its limits. and to answer questions above, i asked the same questions to him but got no response (room, space limitations, preferences). i know he said he likes metal, shoe gaze, probably modern rock, etc, so i imagine he's looking for a speaker that can rock out. i agree with the recommendations above (most $ into speakers, budget dac/preamp combo). not because the amp isn't great (i haven't heard it, but I've read a lot of positive feedback here and on steve hoffman and trust the people that have) but id almost recommend he sell the amp to get into the best speakers he can swing, and minimal into the other components. anywho... |
As mentioned, speakers mainly get damaged by being underpowered causing the amp to clip/distort that hurts the drivers. This guy is clearly not an audiophile and listens to music that’s usually not well recorded, so he’d likely be happy with the biggest Klipsch speakers he can afford for big dynamics/bass and a decent preamp/DAC. He’d probably be thrilled with this combo for around $2k and be done with it… https://www.crutchfield.com/p_7148KF2W/Klipsch-Reference-Premiere-RP-8000F-II-Walnut.html https://www.schiit.com/products?srsltid=AfmBOopp7aTYWSkT24cdtRKnAYwTE_B7-b4jzgXeHi0fuBb8fymguzGv |
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