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What to look for when purchasing new speakers for your home
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Speakers represent a wide variety of sound-producing electronics. They range from old-fashioned bookshelf speakers to surround sound systems that carry a heavy price tag. Shopping for the right speakers can feel overwhelming. With preparation and testing, though, you can find reasonably-priced speakers that enhance your enjoyment of music, movies, television, and video games.

Part 1
Part 1 of 3:

Determining the Right Speakers

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  1. The variety of speaker builds suits individual speakers for different tasks. For casual music listening, a pair of bookshelf speakers would be more than enough. Those who desire a more intensive experience can upgrade to standing speakers. Surround sound systems are also a high-end option. [1]
    • Subwoofers are additional speakers that add depth to bass, which is low tone. They’re good for movies and music with lower range such as rock and metal. [2]
    • For adding general depth to TV and movies, a soundbar or soundbase is an option. These take up less space, require less wiring, and can be combined with a subwoofer.
    • Wireless and wall-mounted speakers benefit from portability and offer new sound angles in your room.
    • For gaming, small specialized speakers usually offer enough sound. These are placed on a desktop near the computer and have magnetic shielding. [3]
  2. Different surfaces affect sound quality. Hard, flat surfaces reflect sound and soft or varying surfaces absorb sound. Sound is also easier to hear in a small room. To get a sense of the room, stand in the center and clap. The less the sound carries, the more powerful the speakers you’ll need. [4]
    • A small room such as a bedroom is fine with bookshelf speakers, but a large carpeted and furnished room benefits from bigger speakers.
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  3. While bookshelf speakers will fit in a small bedroom, you wouldn’t want to try to fit wide standing speakers in there. The sound can overwhelm a small room even if it has lots of absorbent furnishings. On the other hand, if you want a surround sound system for your television, the speakers need space away from the wall and surround you.
    • Where you’ll put the speakers matters. Speakers inside a cabinet, for instance, can get muffled, but so do speakers in room corners since the sound is distorted by the walls.
    • Speakers benefit from being three to four feet away from the sound source. This helps them project sound into the room.
    • Try to keep your speakers around ear-level. At that level, the sound will be clearest to you. [5]
    EXPERT TIP

    Jocotra Cathey

    TV Mounting Service Expert
    Jocotra Cathey is a TV Mounting Service Expert and the business owner of TV Mount Charlotte, a professional TV mounting company operating in Charlotte, North Carolina. For the past 18 years, Jocotra's company has offered premier home theater installation services, specializing in home theater design, wiring and installation, projector and screen installation, wire concealing, and more. He has received certifications in Computer Science and Low-Voltage Certification from Central Piedmont Community College.
    Jocotra Cathey
    TV Mounting Service Expert

    Consider room and budget when selecting speakers. When choosing speakers, consider the room and your budget. Upstairs room? Ceiling speakers are easier to install. Carpeted floor? Concealing wires becomes a breeze. And, of course, keep an eye on the budget. From ceiling to wall-mounted to bookshelf speakers, your options are many. The trick lies in how you want to conceal the wires and how polished you want the installation to be.

  4. It’s very easy to fall into a price tag trap. You’ll see bigger and better-looking speakers or a salesperson will refer you to them even though quality isn’t completely related to price. A cheaper speaker may work better for you than a more expensive one. Stick to your budget as much as possible.
    • Once you’ve decided on the type of speaker you need, go online or shop around in stores to compare prices. Determine how much you’re willing to pay for the kind of speaker that seems right for you.
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Part 2
Part 2 of 3:

Confirming the Specifics

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  1. If you intend on hooking the speakers to an old stereo system or receiver, you’ll use speaker wire. On the other hand, modern speakers and devices use improved cables or even operate in your home on Bluetooth or Wi-Fi.
    • Speaker wire utilizes two wires that contain a positive or negative charge and end in various connectors. Some connectors plug into other devices while other connectors have to be clipped onto stereos. [6]
  2. Traditional speakers don’t have amplifiers, especially small bookshelf speakers. If you have an amplifier, find the model number. Search online for your amplifier and note its power and resistance numbers. These numbers will be in labeled in watts and ohms. [7]
    • Always match speakers with amps to avoid damaging your electronics. The boxes of the speakers will have similar numbers to the amp or indicate they are compatible with your amp’s ohm and watt numbers.
  3. Impedance, measured in ohms, signifies how much the speakers resist the power sent by the amplifier. Search the box or instruction manual for the power numbers. Compare this to your amplifier, if you have one. Choose speakers that indicate they match your amplifier’s ohm level or are compatible with it.
    • Most amplifiers are compatible with eight ohms. If you already know similar speakers work with your amp, you’ll be safe using these.
    • Lower impedance speakers require more powerful amps. If the speaker impedance is too low, the amp can overheat.
  4. Power handling is measured in watts. The larger the amount of watts the speaker can handle, the greater the sound signal. This too should be matched to your amplifier, if you have one. Higher watt speakers often require more powerful amplifiers. [8]
    • If your amplifier sends out more watts than your speaker uses, you can damage the speaker.
  5. The sensitivity is measured in decibels (dB). This indicates how loud the speaker’s sound can be. The higher the sensitivity, the more volume it can deliver in a watt of electricity. 80-88 dB is considered low and 100 dB high. [9]
    • A higher sensitivity usually means a more expensive speaker or one that sacrifices quality in other areas that affect sound, such as the speaker cone. [10]
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Part 3
Part 3 of 3:

Testing the Speakers

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  1. Once you’ve found speakers, don’t buy them blind if you can help it. First rap your knuckles against the speakers. The speaker should feel solid and give you back a solid sound. If it sounds hollow now, it’ll sound hollow when you try using it to play your entertainment at home. [11]
    • If you’re buying speakers online, you can search for reviews or tests of the speakers, but to some degree you’re shopping blind.
  2. Check that all the plugs work, then listen to the sound. Stand close enough, about ear-level to the front of the speakers. Judge if the internal components give you the sound you desire. The tightness of the covering over the speaker as well as the material of the speaker cone change the sound. Listen for any distortion, fuzziness, or crackling. [12]
    • If the outer enclosure is wide or loose, the sound reverberates too much inside the speaker. If the enclosure is too tight, the speaker rattles and the sound distorts. [13]
    • Cones are made of varying materials such as aluminum and polypropylene and push out air to make sound. Turn the settings up to volumes and frequencies you’ll use at home in order to judge the speaker’s sound range.
  3. If possible, give the sound quality a personal test. Good test songs are ones you know well that you have available on a CD or other format where the song’s quality hasn’t been compromised. Queue up the tracks. Listen for sound quality as well as the problems, such as if the vocals and instruments sound off.
    • Test different features by using a variety of songs, such as ones that include a strong bass, quiet vocals, or instruments.
    • Quality speakers may help you experience parts of the songs you’ve never heard, including small details like fingers sliding on strings or covered-up instruments.
    • You may be able to use a music device such as an iPod, but transferring the song file to the iPod lessens the quality and doesn’t give you the most accurate speaker test.
  4. A home test puts the speakers in the environment you want. Set the speakers up where you intend on having them. Play your music, movies, TV shows, or whatever else you intend on listening to with them. This is a good time to play your music too if you didn’t do it before.
    • Relax. Even if the speaker seems impressive at first, stay attentive. Is this one you can listen to for a while, or does the sound quality make you want to turn it off?
    • Test it with your amplifier if you can. Speakers and amplifiers all have their own sound characteristics. The best combinations usually come from complementary qualities. For example, a mellow sound balances a bright sound.
    • Remember that sound quality is personal and objective. Your needs influence what speaker is right for you, so don’t let any salesperson pressure you into a decision.
  5. Before you buy the speakers, make sure the store has a friendly return policy. This is even more important if you’re shopping online, since you don’t get a chance to test the speakers in person and have to wait through shipping. Many companies will let you return the product for full price two weeks to a month after the purchase date.
    • Keep your receipt and original boxing on hand until you’re sure that you’re keeping the speakers.
    • Always keep and refer to the warranty information. The warranty gives you the right to quality assurance and a refund for a faulty product.
    • Most companies accept returns for manufacturing flaws and dissatisfaction, not damage related from installation, use, or wear and tear.
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      Tips

      • It is impossible to judge speakers based on characteristics listed on the box. It’s always a good idea to listen to them in the store, preferably with a familiar song on a CD.
      • Some stores will let you demo the speakers at home. If this isn’t an option, make sure your store has a helpful return policy.
      • Size and price aren’t always indicators of sound quality. You can find expensive bookshelf speakers that sound worse to you than a cheaper standing speaker.
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      Warnings

      • Match your speakers to your amplifier. Speakers that have less impedance can get damaged. Amplifiers that don’t give enough power will cause poor sound quality.
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      Things You'll Need

      • Amplifier, if your speakers don’t include one
      • A CD or other music source

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