They don't last long on market place once they get below 200. I paid 200 for these and that for one pair of the s38iis. One pair I got for $75. I'm not a flipper, or an investor, and tend to think in terms of whether I can get $200 worth of pleasure from them and the answer in this case is, "easily." Saw one pair of the S38BE recently, that looked perfect for $70 and they were just blocks away from me but I hesitated and. . .poof. A lot of pairs have the dreaded pushed in dust caps and these don't appear to be replaceable and I would hate to rig a repair with a different dust cap.
New, 'affordable', 8" 3-way speakers are rather rare, to non-existent, and the technical "good reasons" for such things don't align with my needs. One thing I noticed with a well implemented 3-way is, you never really hear anyone complaining about, or having to fuss over bass, regardless if it's flawed, in audiophilic terms. I turn to 3-ways when I am tired of reasoning with audiophiles, and just want to listen to music.
I have a small desk'top' as well. All one really needs to do is take the "top" out of the term. There's a pair of 12" subs there as well. No room treatments, nada. The other thing is to turn off the audiophilia, perhaps hold one's nose a little, and remember to stop listening long enough to eat, for bathroom breaks, or to finally go to bed.
ETA: I'm sure these are since Harman JBL and Infinity were as one. I had no idea that was you from here on FB.
Currently, I have the F-12 Tempests pictured behind the JBLs in the photo as my near field speakers and it is so ridiculously bada$$. Near field subs are no joke, either. I can change sound pressure characteristics, simply by opening/closing doors in other parts of the house. This room is 30ft long. if I open the door at the other end, the standing bass at the opposite end literally goes out the door. as does whatever hint of reflective feedback (unnoticeable anyway, likely due to all the furniture and stuff in here) there maybe gets cancelled as well.