MY CURRENT STATE
I've been patrolling these forums quite a lot throughout the years and now I'm in the market to buy new budget speakers. Currently I took a Sony STR-K840P (500 watts [100x1 channel]) from a 5.1 box system and I have two crappy Aiwa 3-way speakers as the fronts with the 5.1 sony center still there and the subwoofer that came with the box system as well.
Its plugged into my PC through an Asus Xonar D2S with a TOSLINK cable and I'm content with its performance with PC Games.
The problem is movies, and music!
Movies are a pain to watch with this. I found out by a scientific test of putting my ear to each round indention on these Aiwa speakers, that the "tweeter" doesn't even exist at all, as in, it was never a tweeter, just a tricky round circle. Its front ported so its not even a port. The "Tweeter" on the speakers is about 2 inches which I would totally guess is a cone tweeter. (I'm a bit of a noob thats only been researching speakers frequently) The center is so paltry that I never bother to even use it. The thing is downright absurdly terrible. Then I can't make out clear dialogue since these tweeters are crap as well. The ambiance and whatnot actually isn't too bad, the woofers are about 5". Blade Runner was a downright shame to watch with these speakers ( I do have Grado SR-60's that I listen to the album in though which did more justice, but I don't wear headphones since I do get fatigue from the Grados.)
Music suffers from a total lack of immersiveness and what I call, paperyness. Cymbals and whatnot do not sound metallic at all. They sound almost like paper. My equalizer in Foobar is set to put most things at negative whatever, while 70hz and 110hz with 14khz and 20khz are put nearly at 0db so when I turn it up, I can get more of a bass/midrange response, but then some songs just continue to sound very papery, with nonexistent midrange. It feels like the singers are singing with a sheet of notebook paper in front of their mouths, and the drums are also covered with notebook paper. At louder volumes, there IS a small sweet level, but its usually too loud to be pleasing, and louder makes it sound downright harsh. When I put on my sub, I turn it to a flat EQ but the sub just takes away from how it should really sound. The sub works well with Movies and Games since it mostly booms and I'm mostly annoyed at how midrange and vocals are handled.
I listen to: Alot of classic rock (The Who, The Clash, ACDC, Zeppelin, Johnny Cash [Not so much rock...]). Old 90's Rap mostly, with some new stuff like some Indie Houston rappers and Mos Def, Talib, etc. I also listen to alot of modern indie rock (Animal Collective, Neon Indian, Cut Copy, etc) which have strong electric themes as well. I'm pretty well versed in my listenings, except I don't listen to classical. Piano Jazz is what i listen to when studying.
As for my room, its incredibly small, with a huge ceiling (more that 14 Feet) but I have a sheet making it about 6 feet to prevent excess sun and heat from the higher windows from making my room excessively hot (I live in Houston, TX, it gets hot and muggy!). Its about 8x7 so I can't have any "wide" sounding speakers otherwise I'm afraid it might just sound terribly odd in my room.
WHAT I'M LOOKING FOR
I'm wanting a pretty well rounded set of bookshelves. Overall though, I want strong midrange performance. I would sacrifice that for lower range performance since I have a sub that I'm content with FOR NOW (Not in the future!). I also want great tweeter performance, and I can't bring myself to invest too much into the speakers since my receiver is crap. So I don't want a picky speaker. Hence why I've been looking at the Klipsch B-3 and the Yamaha NS-333 since they're horn loaded which I've read a lot, means they're pretty non-picky and efficient. I could care less about coloration, I'm not using any audiophile receiver as mentioned above so... yeah.
THE SPEAKERS I'VE BEEN LOOKING AT PURCHASING
Yamaha NS-333 - $150-200 Give or take
Yamaha NS-6490 - $150 at Audioholic's store
Klipsch Synergy B-3 - $180
Behringer Truth 2031P - $180 (On Amazon. Seen it cheaper at other places)
Dayton BR-1 -$170 after shipping (I am mechanically inclined so I don't mind the assembly)
MY CONCERNS
Klipsch B-3 -> I hear these have very little bass. I hope the midrange is strong. Anyone have experience? I also hear these are totally different from the References, true? $180 is a good price though from what I've seen. Klipsch forum-ers love these, yet some of them hate them and totally rip them once they got References. Are they (references) REALLY that good to hate your old speakers?
Yamaha NS-333 -> They look like they have a great woofer. The Tweeter is horn loaded. There is however a lack of reviews around. Most compare it to its price range, but how would it stack against the Klipsch B-3? I know it has a smaller woofer, but since midrange and clarity is what I'm looking for...
Yamaha NS-6490 -> They seem to be cheaply-er made than the NS-333 considering the price even though it has an extra driver on it. Do I need a 3-way speaker if I've already got a sub?
Dayton BR-1 -> Don't know if people just boast them because they built them theirselves (so obviously its better to the beholder!) They have a low frequency response which seems good, but is it really quality there? I've seen the Dodge Dakota have a V8 engine, that still gets outgunned by my Nissan Xterra's 4 Litre V6. Numbers can be pretty subjective.
Behringer 2031P -> Seem like the Hyundai of speakers. They boast ALOT of claims and seem to have the marketing on their website to back them up and they're cheap, but are they as great as claimed? How would they be in my tiny room? Are they mostly used for guitar/instrument people (the reviews I've read are mostly those people). The 2030's were reviewed in the budget bookshelf speaker shootout, but not the 20301's. Would my receiver be fine?
I did take a listen to Polk TSi 100 speakers in Best Buy but only at the radio and the worker was being an idiot and preventing me from plugging in my Sansa (I've got FLAC playback on it) to really try to get a feel for them. Told me "I'm going to break it"... Yeah right. Theres a Modia home theatre that has the NS-333's and I'm going to try to listen to them sometime this weekend probably. The Polk TSi 100's though, they didn't sound to great through the radio (Hardly a proper test though) but I think I got a hold on what "Polks sound like" (heard people cite this multiple times) and I wasn't too keen on them.
I did look at the ORB speakers but I came to the conclusion that they're small and won't really serve my needs/wants properly. I'm all for "Bigger is not ALWAYS better" (I do Brazilian Jiu Jitsu!) but there is a point where size DOES matter.
I don't think there are any other speakers I've been seriously looking it (I'll update if I can remember any/come across any). I'd love for you guys to give your input and even recommend some other brands for me! I'd love to hear what y'alls experiences with any of these are, or speakers in general that might help steer me into my decision. I know speakers is very subjective, but I just want to hear some personal input. I might've started rambling on, if theres any clarification needed, feel free to ask.
I did audition some Paradigm Signatures just to hear what prime time should sound like so I might've spoiled my ears too early on! I'm also totally open to used speakers as well. Design/aesthetics don't really matter to me since I'm just looking for better performance. I have been keeping track of CList and Audiogon just to keep my mind in the zone. I'd like to buy from a place that has a lenient return policy.