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Featured Replies

Posted

Hello.

I am currently wanting to redo my setup to a nice bookshelf, center channel, and sub setup. I already have a nice sub so I'll keep that and use what I have now for something else.

My budget is about $600 for the the bookshelfs and the center channel. I currently have these speaker stands

http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/pshowdetl.c...FTOKEN=79969804

and wish to keep them. However, I think this may restrict the height of my bookshelfs. The center channel will be placed under the TV.

Any suggestions?

  • Author
Im currently building this, a nice little setup I did a ton of research looking for the best design for my needs.

http://home.hawaii.rr.com/sanaka/AudioDIY/DHT/DHT.html

This here would fit your budget to

http://www.partsexpress.com/projectshowcase/sc51/index.cfm

Thanks.

I will look into the 1st one when I get home.

I think what I am going to do first is replace the reciever to see if that changes anything sound wise. Something tells me these polks can sound good.

I am looking into either the Denon, Pioneer Elite, etc is the $400 range. So I won't have to upgrade and then I'll know whether or not is the the receiver or the speakers.

  • Author
For that budget I'd just build two speakers and forego the center altogether.

I though the center channel was the most important speaker for movies. I watch movies more than I listen to music. So do you think a really nice 2.1 setup could accomodate this?

The center channel is, in a big room but in all reality I don't think your budget is high enough to add one.

Think of it this way since you have $600 for diy stuff.

Go to your local home audio store and listen to a set of $1000 speakers which for $600 you should easily be able to build. Then compare them with a pair that is only $600 (if you need to build 3 they will be more along the lines of this quality). What would you rather live with? I think it will be a no brainer.

  • Author
I didn't say it wouldn't work, but I will reiterate that it would sound better putting all of your budget into just two speakers instead of stretching it thin.

I see your point.

I am all for the DIY thing but building the crossovers is a bit beyond my level of expertise. I am looking for something either already together, or easy to assemble (with prebuilt crossovers).

I would think the best solution would go ahead and buy a better 5.1 receiever because I know I want a center channel some day. Just buy a nice 2 channel and buy the center channel when I can afford it.

I looked at the 5.1 chad posted, I am unsure if 30 watts will be enough. I am thinking something that does 5x110 or so for a budget around $300.

the 30 watts rating is about like the sundown 1500d rating from what ive read. Ill link to a couple of reviews for ya so you can see what i mean.

also diy crossovers arent really that bad, ive learned alot building mine, i had no idea what i was doing to begin with , and im actually starting mine over tonight, but I would gladly help you on your way. I think your in the same position I was a few weeks ago, thats why I've been so willing to help, because lets be honest nobody likes being a noob :)

here is the link to the AVR-130 Review, The 146 is slightly better and has a few nicer features, its also more widely availible

http://www.audioholics.com/reviews/receive.../avr-130-review

the main reason that review gave the 130 a bad review is the lack of a visual interface, a problem which the 146 fixed.

http://reviews.cnet.com/av-receivers/harma...7-30632952.html

Regarding the AVR 130's modest power rating, we'd like to bring up another specification that's almost always a more reliable predictor of build quality and power: the receiver's weight. The AVR 130 tips the scales at 23.8 pounds, right up there with many 100-watt-per-channel receivers. In comparison, Sony's STR-DE895 receiver (110 watts x 6) weighs 21 pounds. That's why we weren't at all concerned with the AVR 130's modest ratings, and our listening tests confirmed that hunch.
  • Author
the 30 watts rating is about like the sundown 1500d rating from what ive read. Ill link to a couple of reviews for ya so you can see what i mean.

also diy crossovers arent really that bad, ive learned alot building mine, i had no idea what i was doing to begin with , and im actually starting mine over tonight, but I would gladly help you on your way. I think your in the same position I was a few weeks ago, thats why I've been so willing to help, because lets be honest nobody likes being a noob :)

here is the link to the AVR-130 Review, The 146 is slightly better and has a few nicer features, its also more widely availible

http://www.audioholics.com/reviews/receive.../avr-130-review

the main reason that review gave the 130 a bad review is the lack of a visual interface, a problem which the 146 fixed.

http://reviews.cnet.com/av-receivers/harma...7-30632952.html

Regarding the AVR 130's modest power rating, we'd like to bring up another specification that's almost always a more reliable predictor of build quality and power: the receiver's weight. The AVR 130 tips the scales at 23.8 pounds, right up there with many 100-watt-per-channel receivers. In comparison, Sony's STR-DE895 receiver (110 watts x 6) weighs 21 pounds. That's why we weren't at all concerned with the AVR 130's modest ratings, and our listening tests confirmed that hunch.

Thanks for a link to that audioholics forum. I think reading the reviews will give me a better grasp of what is what.

I didn't say it wouldn't work, but I will reiterate that it would sound better putting all of your budget into just two speakers instead of stretching it thin.

I see your point.

I am all for the DIY thing but building the crossovers is a bit beyond my level of expertise. I am looking for something either already together, or easy to assemble (with prebuilt crossovers).

For $600 you definitely can't buy three pre-made speakers, they will sound like ass. I'd look for a good used set if you have to buy pre-made and only get a pair. If the budget of $600 includes the receiver you are really stuck...

24 pounds for 100 watts? Lightweight :P

If building a crossover scares you, don't use a crossover then :)

Not using crossovers is even easier :P

Building crossovers is easy, but the components aren't cheap if you do it right.

Not using crossovers is even easier :P

Building crossovers is easy, but the components aren't cheap if you do it right.

I always assume as much as the drivers I am using, a bit less if they are paper and potentially significantly more if they are Mag or Kev for instance.

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