Best speaker firing across short dimension of room


Hi 'goners.

I need help deciding what type of speaker (floorstanding, stand mount, physical dimensions, diver configuration) would work best "midfield," firing across the short dimension of my 13' x 30' room.

The best practical setup for me in this particular room is to arrange the speakers on either side of my fireplace, as a 9-10' equilateral triangle between speaker and listener. Speakers will have a clearance of up to 18" from back wall - but the more I pull them out into the room, the less distance between speaker and listening position.

The sonic characteristics I cherish most are great tone, imaging, soundstaging, plus charging the room with bass.

I've tried both small and large monitors, floorstanders, and subwoofer combinations over the years but my aural memory is short and would like to know if anyone has experienced particularly good results employing the same type of room setup.

FYI, I'd be driving the speakers with a Karan KAi180 Mk2 180 watt SS integrated amp, using Meridian CD as a source.

Any sage advice will be much appreciated.

Thanks,
bob_rodgers
I have Vienna Acoustic Mozart Grand. I might recommend these or the Beethoven Baby Grand. I have a similar space, 12'x22'. What I like is I can have my speakers separated wide, now 14' and I still get some of the best centerfill of any speaker I have heard. If you use CD, which I think robs centerfill a little and where analog doesn't and this makes analog in this important area superior to me, this is a great speaker. The center sound is where it all starts and for me that has to be very good. If not what is built out from there wanes. Also it is a fantastic all around speaker. By that I mean it does imaging, tone, timbre, density, 3d, prat, expression, transparency,micro and macro dynamics all in a very well rounded out fashion, not really lacking much in any of those areas. It is very well balanced. It will let you boogie and sing you in the the finest fashion a lullaby. Works very well with both solid state and medium to higher power tube amps. Good speakers to be on the list to listen to. Give them some time, at first they may not seem the most exciting of the bunch to hear but as time goes by that will probably change. Have fun on your search.
Thanks for the great responses - keep 'em coming! From my limited knowledge, the Raidho D1 and Magico Q1 are both pretty steeply priced - aren't they?

Xti16 - Are the Dyn C1 Sigs the second generation of C1s? I heard that they sound better now at low volumes, which is also one of my priorities...
Bob, The Shelby+Kroll Nano Monitors and (2) Woofer Monitors
would work very well in your space. There is a very positive review of them at Stereo Mojo. The speaker have life like imaging that is spooky real and near perfect tonal balance.

Good luck,
Chris Rodgers
I have a similar situation and I auditioned a ton of speakers. I found that bass response was the most difficult to get set up properly. I think most people always have to compromise their set up due to bass in this situation. I decided to go a different set up in my room because I was able to and it made it easier for me. If I had to stay with your set up, I'd look very strongly at the Vandersteen 4 or 5 as their subwoofers allow you to find the best staging and imaging first and they it's easy to dial in the bass. it's a simple set up and you don't need two external subs. I have yet to hear another speaker that you don't have to compromise, but I haven't hear the Magico's yet. The Proacs also are very easy to set up in this situation. That's what I'm using now until I sell them off (I have proac monitors and floorstanders) They image so well that it's not difficult to get the bass right as you have plenty of wiggle room if you would. Other speakers that image and stage well would work too I bet.
I have a similar arrangement, but put my Zu Def 4s close to the back wall. One alternative is to look for speakers that work close to the back wall (British speakers in general, Zu, VS 33 or 35) and/or have tunable bass.