Need Some Answers Building My First Home Audio System, and using Cornwalls


I have a few questions for you audiophiles out there. I am new to this forum, and I am a music hound and vinyl collector, but as yet not exactly an audiophile, and I definitely lack much knowledge.


I just moved into my first/new home and, in a stroke of luck way beyond my wildest dreams, my new neighbor - in order to "empty out his garage" - gave me two very old, 60's looking 100-watt Klipsch Cornwalls (floor speakers) from their Heritage line (see pic). These are the ones that are 35.75" H x 25.25" w (15.5" deep) and have a titanium tweeter, 1.75" titanium squawker, a woofer and a front-ported cabinet.


My living room’s dimensions are very large, as we blended our kitchen and dining room into it, and took down all non-structural partitions - about 60 feet in length by 35 feet at its widest point.


First I wanted to check on a few things, such as whether these speakers work at all, and I can do that only once I get a receiver (right?). I also need new, less dated grill cloth - I did locate a guy/make a call about that, but I am holding off until I know whether/how I can remove the frame from the front of the speakers. The frames appear nailed in at the front, but the back looks screwed in.

*My turntable (technics 1200-MK2) will be going through this pre-amp (https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B007DB5IDS/ref=ya_st_dp_summary)

*It’s important you know a.) I don't yet want a tube amp and b.) what besides the speakers will need to be powered through the receiver:

-4K TV

-1 Turntable/Pre-Amp (mentioned above)

-4K Ultra HD bluray

-cable box

-iPhone lightning cable and 3.5 mm adaptor for phone/other sources

-2 Klipsch Cornwall speakers


Questions:


A.) I don't need tons of power. All floors are hardwood, with some rugs here and there but can anyone recommend something around 100 W? (I called Klipsch to ask their tech specialist about my speaker details, and the guy said staying at the speaker wattage will be smart, so as not to blow them out) and he said they are 100w. Would like to stay between $200-$500 and get something like a Denon, Onkyo, Yamaha... I suppose it could be used...I obviously want to optimize sound quality. Perhaps your suggestions are contingent on my remaining questions:


B.) Recommendations on a particular Bluetooth-enabled AVR? As much as I love hifi sound from a record on the turntable, there are times when I want to walk In the room and play a recent track from my phone. Also, this is not my private set up - it’s for the whole family, so needs to allow for a range of things, as well as efficiency/convenience. However, I don't use Spotify, Airplay, Sirius, XM, Pandora, DLNA, TuneIn, Tidal, etc. I would only play from actual files on my phone or laptop. (as noted, I will also have a jack coming out of one of the AVR inputs to for my phone to hardwire it sometimes also (in fact, 75% of the time, unless I'm not home for long between work/errands. If you have recommendations on those cables, please let me know.


C) My wife and I got an Alexa for Xmas. Any AVR's work with them? I've read about Smart Home automation and will eventually do the whole thing, but for now it's just music and movies.


D.) i - How do I remove the frame from the front of the speaker in order to replace the cloth? The guy I called about the speaker cloth (Bob Crites, got his name from the Klipsch forum) could tell from the pics that somebody custom made them.


ii- Does anyone recommend removing the cloth altogether and not replacing?


E.) i- Are XLR jacks better connections than just regular wire, or did I misread this?


ii- If so, would the difference in sound be negligible to average ears, or substantial? FYI, I did buy 16awg copper flat wire from Monoprice (pictured) and I imagine that can be connected to XLR's by myself, yes?


iii- speaking of which, how do I actually connect the wires to the Cornwalls? It's a very basic question, but I've never had proper speakers like this, and I don't want to screw it up. Is there a particular technique or nuance?


F.) We may eventually buy a whole-home bluetooth and/or wifi speaker system to bring to our master bedroom and two other bedrooms, so it will have to allow for that.


I think that's all. Sorry if I've overwhelmed anyone.

Thanks in advance and happy new year.


128x128djniteline
http://http//www.showmecables.com/product/Spade-Plug-Metal-Gold-2-PK.aspx @atmasphere Thanks very much. I needed the lesson and hope you'll have more for me later.

When you mentioned that the music shouldn't sound loud, that clicked. Because although I seemingly had a problem with my speaker the other night, I was enjoying the color and breadth of the sound. Indeed, it sounded rich - it DID NOT sound loud until the interruption happened, which may well have been caused by the lack of spade plug Mesch mentions, or the overloaded circuit.

What is a tube amp you'd recommend for $400 or less? Should I sell my newly purchased NAD 326BEE? (which I just bought, as was the purpose/genesis of this thread)? I was also looking for a bluetooth DAC anyways, and someone made a great recommendation, but it seems Monoprice also makes a cheap tube/bluetooth combo that has great reviews - https://www.monoprice.com/product?p_id=16153

@mesch do I need one pair of spades for each side of wire at each point of connection, aka 4 pairs?

I have isolated the receiver power to a separate outlet and will try it later.

I have noticed the quickly oscillating, metronomic buzzing occurs usually after going from another input like AUX (where my toslink/optical adapter is from TV) or from the POWER OFF position.
What is a tube amp you'd recommend for $400 or less?
Well that's the thing about tube power, and why there are high efficiency loudspeakers. I can't think of where you would find a $400 tube power amp, unless you are able to find one on Craigslist or at a garage sale.

Sometimes you find Dynaco ST-70s in such places. Usually they need to be refurbished, but if the price is right, they are totally worth it.
@atmasphere so, will the tube amp completely replace my integrated amp or will the IA be used for all of my other inputs?
If a power amp like the ST-70 you would still need a preamp.

If your budget really is that severe then the NAD might have to be the ticket for a while.

There are integrated tube amps from the classic period (1958 to 1965 or so). Most of them are 30 watts/channel or less, and go for a surprising amount of money if in good shape. But your speakers were built for amps exactly like that...
@atmasphere per your previous comments, after giving my serial # in a previous comment, I was told my Cornwalls are from 1973, not the 60's.