Your teenage kids complain about "you" playing movies or music too loud? What is wrong with your kids?
It may also interest you that none of the those speakers I bought without seeing/hearing them first, and I mean those specifically. I figure at the prices I often pay, it's worth the risk of getting something that might not sound good to me, it might sound good to someone else anyway, so all is not lost. My current fave are the littlest of the bunch, the Celestion 3. They are such a sweet sounding speaker, I'm amazed at what these tiny boxes can do.
EPI made some pretty solid speakers in their time, efficient too.
I bought the EPIs in 1968 and they had a brochure which included the production workforce. They all looked like hippies – real long hair, headbands, etc. I thought it was pretty cool. Each speaker came with its own frequency response plot on special plotting machine paper. Had them for about 20 years until the surrounds rotted out, then I sold some components and donated my whole system to charity and started over. It never occurred to me that the speakers could be repaired.
My kids (18 and 20) complain about having the audio system on at all. They usually are doing homework and studying when I am at home, so sometimes they complain and I have to turn the TV down to barely audible, or turn the sound off altogether. (I don’t want the kids doing worse in school, with lower GPAs and loosing scholarships because of me.)
Watching TV without sound is a little different. The Simpsons and the History Channel usually have something worth watching that doesn’t need the volume on. I’ve got some headphone extension cords so I may see if I can get that working. Most of the time I watch TV I am also on a wireless laptop PC in an overstuffed recliner reading forums and researching topics related to home audio, car audio, 10th generation Corollas (2009, 2010) and slickdeals.com.
As far as playing the audio system loud, I have to basically be at home alone, and that doesn’t happen much. My son commutes to college, but my daughter is going to live on campus starting this fall, so I may get more chances to listen to the audio system.
I think I will have the Model 6’s by Friday and I have the day off. (We work nine hour days and every other week we get Friday off – it is a really good system once you adjust to the longer work days.)
I plan to hook the speakers up Friday and start putting hours on them. (User comments say you have to put on some hours (50 hours maybe?) before the Model Sixes start to sound good. I think my kids might be out of the house, so I just have to deal with my wife. I can probably play the speakers at normal volume using my wife’s favorite music. (I haven’t heard the Talking Heads Live, ZZ Top and Tina Turner for a long time.)
Listening to music in the car is so much easier – that is probably going to be the case for the next two years at least- so I am investing time and putting money into car audio for now. I am putting in a good car audio system that maintains the stock look of the car interior for anti-theft reasons.
Car audio guys plaster the interior side of the outside car shell with specially formulated vibration dampening material (Dynamat Extreme and Second Skin for example) that is sticky back and clings to car panels. I wonder if it would work inside the Model Sixes better than fiberglass?
The Model Sixes are just a long shot worth trying for $90. If they don’t work out, I probably won’t buy any speakers for a few more years, unless there is another irresistible deal.