Hi!
I have been trying to understand how in-wall speakers work, I am planning to install either a pair of LR in-walls, or a LRC combination, music beeing more important than surround sound.
I like the KEF Q Series so I started to look at KEF CI160QL and CI200QL. My wall is a brick wall, so a backbox has to be installed. KEF sells a backbox which has about 10 liters of volume, how can this possibly give a good bass response for a sealed design?? Asking at KEF I am advised to have at minimum 33 liters or even better 55 liters (but they dont sell such a box). This sounds more reasonable, although it would result in quite a big backbox which I would have to build on my own. Somehow this all sounds as a very little controlled environment for the drivers, speaker volume is an important parameter. The crossover is related with the volume too. Also, why not use a ported design? Inside a wall space is king and a ported speaker needs less volume I think.
So I have a look at B&W. They seem to do things in a more controlled manner, use a ported design and an "extension box" to obtain more volume, although these are plastic boxes, which might not be the best material for the backbox? I can find no review about say the B&W CWM 7.4. No technical material like FR curves available.
Here where I live there is no possibility to see a shop that carries in-wall speakers, so I will have to buy "blind". Any sites with information about this type of speakers? Tips for other alternatives up to say max. 600$/speaker, better less?
Bookshelfes are not an option, my wife wants to get rid of the Q100 I now have as a front pair.