Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Stephen wrote:
In article , Chris Morriss wrote: In message , MINe 109 writes In article , Newbie wrote: Stewart Pinkerton wrote: : I had 104s, and I can assure you that he will have no troble at all in : this regard. Given our new knowledge of his budget, I'd suggest a hard : look at the B&W N804, the Spendor S9 and the JMLab Elektra range. Also : of course the incomparable Quad 988/989 for a completely different : experience. Hello Stewart. I appreciate your suggestions. However, I live a small (expensive but tiny!) big-city apartment. The Quads are out of the question! I suppose the speakers could be tall, but must have a small footprint. One general question I can't even articulate well goes like this: If you have very good speakers of this age (my KEF's, or BC-1s, Rogers, etc.), with no obvious breakdown, just old age, is it better to get them "reconditioned", or has the speaker technology improved so much that one should replace them? Are you dissatisfied with the sound? There could be a simple fix by repositioning them or using room treatments. Maybe you could tell us about the room: hard floors, high ceilings, square footage, that kind of thing. Anyway, what are the best "sleek" speakers that don't need much floor space? The Magneplanar 1.6 are tall but only 19" wide and 2" deep. But they need about 1.5 metres of space behind them! Nah, just angle them at 45 degrees to the back wall... Okay, just kidding. It wouldn't be unusual to have a stand-mounted speaker that far into the room. I do think there are advantages to near-wall placement as often found in British speakers (like my tv system Linn Kabers) or the Allisons mentioned earlier that I know by reputation and a recent review in Absolute Sound. Stephen Stephen Allisons are, unfortunately, gasbag certified. Bruce J. Richman |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|