Best budget speakers for near-field/small space


Hi Ladies & Gents,

First time on Audiogon.

Coming from headphones, due to dorm constraints, I'm finally going to be able to get a speaker setup once I move into an apartment at the end of the year.

Sharing an apartment with a few mates, so I'll be setting up the speakers in my bedroom. The room is probably going to be pretty small (about 12 by 8 feet), and with my bed, wardrobe and all, optimal speaker positioning might be a problem.

Hence I'm thinking of going with a near-field setup, on my desk with my computer since that's where I do most of my listening. I could swap my chair and desk with a nice recliner as well, but its going to be near-field either way.

My budget for speakers and amps is pretty tight. Under 1000USD (please don't tease =) and the lower the better. I'm looking for the greatest bang for my buck what with being a student and all.

I listen almost exclusively to Jazz. Mostly 50's 60's bop, hard bop etc. Some acoustic singer-songwriter stuff, and indie rock as well, but only occasionally.

At the lowest end of the spectrum the Audioengine A5 looks interesting. Possibly paired with S8 subwoofer. Being active, I'd save on electronics and could add a DAC down the road, to pair with my Macbook Pro.

At the upper end of my budget, the Magnepan MMG looks very attractive especially with the great reviews on the web. Potential worries: read that they need a really beefy amp that might cost a bit, and more importantly, positioning. I don't believe these speakers were made with near-field listening in mind so that's a bit of a worry.

I've also heard many great things about the Linkwitz Pluto. And since its available as a DIY I could save some bucks (though I have no experience whatsoever, so its a bit daunting).

Other active/passive studio monitors seem to be decent choices as well. The KRK Rokit series, Dynaudio BM5a etc seem like viable alternatives, but I'm worried that they won't be as 'musical' as hi-fi speakers and might end up being cold and too revealing (might be a problem with badly mastered records, especially all those bright RVG remasters).

I have incredibly limited experience with speakers. More well-versed with headphones only. So I really need your help!

Many thanks in advance!
milesandcoltrane
Maggies are FANTASTIC at nearfield. A receiver can run MMG's, a amp is better, but the MMG's are just good period for under 1k
My personal fav--- B&W 685 and Wharfedale's previous Diamond 9.1

If your small room is "cubish"/squarish, you might be pissed off with the boomy, resonating bass caused by standing waves. I learned this the hard way many years ago, and relocated my system to the living room.

Marantz CD5300+ Wharfedale 9.1 + Musical Fidelity A1 (class A integrated). Fabulous sounding combo.

Yesterday, when I was adutioning NAD 375 integrated amp, I also had it paired with B&W 685 bookshelf speakers, and it was a wonderful sound. Very wide, spacious soundstage, impressive depth, respectable bass and very smooth, naturally flowing highs. The combo was using Supra interconnects and speaker cables.
My choice, without any question, would be the WaveTouch Audio Grand Tetons (small, standmount monitor) - for a small room / area - if you can find them used to fit your budget.

Simply incredible, unbelievable "live, life-like" sound!

Second choice would be the Linkwitz kit / DIY products.
I've checked all the speakers listed, they are good, at the cost of higher price, nothing beats the hidden boss bookshelf speakers, that's Wharfedale Denton 80th Anniversary, why? They sound good almost on all music genre (dun waste your time look for preamp, it sound already tuned), and the craftsmanship at this price is not found from anywhere, and it's good for near field too. Get a pair of Denton, it will never leave your room, guarantee return. But, it's better you can audition at home first, and return it if you dun like it
Look at the Adam A7X near-field powered monitors ($1500/pr) or, as Bassdude suggests above, the Wavetouch GT's (which I own)...just because a speaker is small does not necessarily guarantee that they will do well in the near field, but I can tell you that the GT's most certainly do. The also have the Mihorns included that subjectively increase the speed of everything upstream...and without sonic drawback. Considering that a decent sense of speed will be rather hard to come by in any amp under a grand, that will go a long way to getting the maximum overall bang for your buck, IMHO.