Thank you all for your excellent input. As a follow up, I finally was able to find the website on these speakers...since I cannot post link, here is the info.
"a far-forward woofer mounted in a diminutive, small footprint frame together with a pole-mounted soft dome, lens-free
tweeter, this excellent design avoids the diffraction & near-field boundary distortions that plague many other in-ceiling
loudspeaker designs.
• Tuned for high fidelity and linear performance in standard drywall (ceiling) construction
• System-concentric wide-field dispersion
• Kevlar®fiber 6 ⁄2" (165 mm) native yellow, square-woven woofer (DuPont) with butyl surround
• Tetoron® 1" (25 mm) pivoting soft dome tweeter, woven-textile, lens-free, neodymium motor
• Midrange & high frequency 3-position acoustic compensation switches
• Audio grade polypropylene capacitor populated berglass board crossover circuit
• Drivers wired with audio grade, high strand count, oxygen free copper high current speaker cable
• Vibration dampening motor boots
• T-Stop signal-powered protection circuit prevents tweeter driver failure
• Heavy spring-loaded gold-plated connection terminals accommodate up to 10 gauge speaker cable
• White frames and grilles are ready for mounting with a new finished look; as well, they may be painted to match or
accent mounting surface(s)
• Includes nylon insulation isolating Top Hats. Top Hats “pop” into shape covering the top of the loudspeakers
protecting them from ceiling/roof insulation material fibers & dust. Top Hats are acoustically “absent” in that they
do not restrict cone excursion.
Frequency response: 42Hz - 21kHz ±3dB on reference axis
Sensitivity: 91dB spl (2.83V, 1m)
Nominal impedance: 8 Ohms
Recommended amplifer power: 5W - 175W on unclipped program within frequency domain"
Since I am an amateur concerning these things I'm not sure what to look for as far as parameters of the characteristics of these speakers. I do like to listen to classic rock and some classical as well, especially violin, guitar and a few other instrumentals.
Again thanks for your help, please post additional comments if you have any.
