GAF/Small Form Factor Speakers.

Sheep

Sheep

Audioholic Warlord
Yoddles...

I might be downsizing my home theater in the near future, and was wondering if I could get some small form factor recommendations for speakers. I know of Orb, and I know most companies make puny bookshelf versions of other lines, but I would like small form factor speakers that have a conversation piece type of feel. I want them noticed, in a positive way.

A B&W Zeppelin Air is already in the works for basic music playback, but I want 5 real separated speakers for movies.

I'm new here and don't know anything, please be gentle.

SheepStar
 
its phillip

its phillip

Audioholic Ninja
I do like the custom finishes on the orbs and the gallo speakers are also quite attractive and small.
 
STRONGBADF1

STRONGBADF1

Audioholic Spartan
Good to hear from you Brian. How's the photography bug treating you?

Always thought Mirage Speakers looked cool with the grill off.



IDK if they sound good to you though.
 
A

alphaiii

Audioholic General
Pyrrho

Pyrrho

Audioholic Ninja
How small is small? Will an ordinary bookshelf size be okay, or do you require something smaller? I love my Aurum Cantus Leisure 2SE (original U.S. version) speakers for my home theater, and have no plans on ever upgrading. You can read about the replacement here:

http://www.kellsieavdesign.com/products/Leisure2SE.htm
(though the link there to a review is for the inferior "international" version)

And see a brochure on them here:

http://www.kellsieavdesign.com/AC_brochure002.JPG

They have a gorgeous finish, which my wife loves (and so do I). Photographs do not do them justice.

They are beautiful enough for conversation, and the ribbon tweeter is another thing one can talk about.
 
Sheep

Sheep

Audioholic Warlord
The Orb, Gallo, and those types of speakers are what I'm after. Completely forgot about Mirage's smaller offerings, and would actually like those a lot as they are voiced similarly to my Energy's.

Keep em coming!

SheepStar
 
STRONGBADF1

STRONGBADF1

Audioholic Spartan
The Orb, Gallo, and those types of speakers are what I'm after. Completely forgot about Mirage's smaller offerings, and would actually like those a lot as they are voiced similarly to my Energy's.

Keep em coming!

SheepStar
I was thinking you might with the Energy/Mirage family connection.
 
Adam

Adam

Audioholic Jedi
First thing that I found after seeing the initial post were those Mirages, but I didn't post them because I didn't think that they stood out enough. My bad.

How did I find them? Searched Amazon for "small speakers," of course. :)
 
Pyrrho

Pyrrho

Audioholic Ninja
The Orb, Gallo, and those types of speakers are what I'm after. Completely forgot about Mirage's smaller offerings, and would actually like those a lot as they are voiced similarly to my Energy's.

Keep em coming!

SheepStar
In that case, my recommendation is that you reconsider. No tiny speaker is going to be able to go low enough for a proper crossover with a subwoofer, and consequently you will either have a gap in your frequency response or you will be able to locate the subwoofer by the sound (or both, as with these).

From a quick search of online reviews for the two models you first mention, the companies seem to essentially admit as much by the fact that they seem to not send them to reviewers who actually take measurements. Plus, of course, they do not seem to list proper specifications on their web sites, another sign that they have some unpleasant facts that they want to hide.

The absolute smallest woofer that I have ever encountered that goes low enough to be adequate for proper blending with a subwoofer at a low enough frequency to not be a problem is about 5". I do not recommend anything smaller than that.

If space is that much of a problem, I would recommend in-wall speakers instead, so that you will not have the problem of not going low enough to satisfactorily blend with a subwoofer. Or use headphones.
 
Sheep

Sheep

Audioholic Warlord
In that case, my recommendation is that you reconsider. No tiny speaker is going to be able to go low enough for a proper crossover with a subwoofer, and consequently you will either have a gap in your frequency response or you will be able to locate the subwoofer by the sound (or both, as with these).

From a quick search of online reviews for the two models you first mention, the companies seem to essentially admit as much by the fact that they seem to not send them to reviewers who actually take measurements. Plus, of course, they do not seem to list proper specifications on their web sites, another sign that they have some unpleasant facts that they want to hide.

The absolute smallest woofer that I have ever encountered that goes low enough to be adequate for proper blending with a subwoofer at a low enough frequency to not be a problem is about 5". I do not recommend anything smaller than that.

If space is that much of a problem, I would recommend in-wall speakers instead, so that you will not have the problem of not going low enough to satisfactorily blend with a subwoofer. Or use headphones.
When I said I am new here and don't know anything, I was joking. I guess some people forget.

I know about these issues, but my receivers bass management is fixed at 90Hz. Localized bass is something I've lived with. I have dual subs at the moment to deal with it, but I also will be placing the sub right next to the TV in the new setup. The OMD-5's have enough bass response to handle a proper crossover. But I really don't mind have the tiny speakers. I can enjoy them as much as big ones, I just focus on different elements, like how they are small yet still sound good. That missing gap or localization isn't going to be a deal for me. If it was, I wouldn't downsize.

SheepStar
 

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