This is where I get confused. I was told a two channel setup is what I want for the issue I was having.
I was told that a two channel setup will help not to cut the amp off. So I can have it hooked as a surround sound and crank it up real loud? I'm definitely getting a sub now.
Here is what I would like.
My Yamaha RX-V465 AV Receiver,
Two front Klisph which I already own rf-28 for the front.
A powered sub I’m guessing which I will get.
My two Klisph bookshelf speakers which I will mount on the rear wall.
I want to play it loud at times. Not all the time but if a good pink Floyd song come on I want to jam. Without the stereo shutting down..
That would be my goal.
For music, there isn't any reason to get a surround sound receiver, except for the room correction equalization. You have a entry level surround sound receiver. But yes, for music, a two channel setup will work fine, as long as you don't listen to multi-channel recordings like SACDs or something like that. You can use your current receiver in two-channel mode just fine. Whoever said to get surround speakers for two-channel setup does not know what they are talking about.
Forget what you were told, what I would do is just use the RF-28 tower speakers. Don't even worry about the surround speakers, I would not bother installing them. You will want a good sub. If you like loud, I would get a live audio sub like I linked to before, no home audio subwoofer will be able to get as loud as those do for the same price. The disadvantages of live sound subs is they are a bit industrial looking and they don't dig really deep in frequencies, but for most music, they will go low enough.
Set the speakers to small and use the sub for bass, that will take a load off the receiver. It should be less likely to shut down at that point. If it still shuts down, you need a better receiver. Don't worry about these grumbling old men, they like to complain. It's OK if you like to crank a tune or two now and then, but if you listen to whole albums with maxed out volume, you are asking for permanent hearing damage. Take a look at
this page.