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  1. #1
    AR Newbie Registered Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Posts
    4

    Mounting Surround Speakers

    Hey guys, I'm new here so hello to everyone and thanks in advance for any of your advice you might provide.

    I'm moving to a new house next week and the family room is already wired for surround sound nicely through the wall. I have a 5.1 system with JBL L-series speakers in the front. My problem is that I plan on using some old JBL S38 bookshelf speakers for the surrounds. They are good speakers (in my opinion) but are rather large, about 25lbs. I haven't been able to find any info on wall mounting these speakers.

    Does anybody have experience mounting large bookshelf speakers for use as surrounds. If so how did you do it and where did you get the materials to mount them. I'm hoping to make the mounting look fairly clean; building a platform out of plywood and screws will not be an option because I'm married.

  2. #2
    Forum Regular
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    halifax,nova scotia,canada
    Posts
    1,083
    Is using stands an option? I have large rear speakers as well and have them mounted on stands filled with sand and lead.I find this set up works very well.The speakers are blutacked to the stands and the stands have spikes.Each side weighs about 50-60 pounds so in order to knock them over you would have to really want to.

    bill
    Speakers-Jm Labs
    Disc player-Sim Audio Moon Calypso
    Pre-amp-Sim Audio P-5.3 SE
    dac= sim audio moon 300d

    Amp-Sim Audio Moon I-3
    Display-Toshiba CRT
    Wires and Cables-Kimber,Straight Wire, ixos, Gutwire and shunyata research
    Sacd-Cambridge Audio
    Bluray--Sony and Cambridge Audio
    Remote-- Harmony 1100

    Power-- Monster

  3. #3
    AR Newbie Registered Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Posts
    4
    Thanks bill,

    The previous owner had run wires through the wall so there are a couple of wall plates with speaker connections on the rear wall up about 6 ft. off the ground. I'd like to use the wiring already installed if possible. The wall plates will be kinda ugly without speakers covering them up and I don't want to have to run new wires if at all possible.

    If I can't find a wall mount solution I'll hit folks up here to recommend some stands. It sounds like you have some pretty good ones.

  4. #4
    Crank it up, dude! huh? hydroman's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Chesapeake Beach MD
    Posts
    212
    My house was obviously owned by an audi-head at some point as well. He screwed gi'Normous eyebolts into the ceiling and must have held them by chains by the looks of it...

    BUT - he did well-insulate the basement when he finished it (Heretofore reffered to as the Man-Cave!)
    H/K AVR635 7.1
    Denon DVD900
    AE AEGIS III Mains
    ION USB Turntable w/ Shure M97XE
    15" Titanic III Sealed Enclosure Sub
    Dayton Rackmount 1000W :O
    Denon Surrounds
    Sony Bravia KDL40S2000

  5. #5
    AR Newbie Registered Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Posts
    4

    Man Cave

    I have an unfinished basement that hope to eventually use to create my own mancave in a couple years; no $ for it now though. I'll bring all my current audio stuff downstairs and get something dainty looking (scoustimas style) for the upstairs familyroom. I think a native 1080P projector thrown onto a 10' screen would do the trick on the video side and I'll have to throw down for some MLV to soundproof a bit too I suspect. It seems like it is always easier to come up with ways to spend money then to make it.

    For anyone else looking to solve the same problem I have with "too big" surrounds, I think I have a solution. There are some wall mounted shelves that are designed for components (receiver/dvd player) that look to be the right size and hold up to 30lbs. The ones I'm looking at are glass and very modern looking:

    http://www.amazon.com/OmniMount-Comp...8432496&sr=1-1

    I'll have to figure out a way to tilt them down slightly without having the speakers come tumbling off.

  6. #6
    nightflier
    Guest
    Tim,

    One thing you want to keep in mind is that wall mounting rear speakers does little for saving space since the area underneath is usually too cramped for traffic- they will extend well into the room at a height that everyone but a 2-year old will find annoying (not to mention that 2-year olds don't stay that short very long and eventually will want to reach up and hang on them). Since the space underneath is wasted, you might be much better off with stands that will lift the speakers to the height of the plates and thus hide these from view. This will also be safer and provide better sound.

    That said, you can easily mount 25lb. speakers if you ensure that you are drilling into something solid behind the drywall. If you do mount, consider that you will need enough space for the speakers, the brackets behind them and any extra space for angling them towards the optimal listening position. That's a lot of weight hanging out there and so you might want to consider getting something more wall mountable and use the JBLs somewhere else instead. Personally, I like the W3 from Axiom Audio (http://www.axiomaudio.com/wallspeakers.html) or if you have more money to spend, you might want to consider the ones I settled on, the Vienna Weberns (http://www.sumikoaudio.net/va/prod_webern.htm#spec), which also sound pretty incredible for on-wall speakers. Both will come with wall-mounting brackets and instructions.

  7. #7
    Suspended PeruvianSkies's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    3,373
    Quote Originally Posted by nightflier
    Tim,

    One thing you want to keep in mind is that wall mounting rear speakers does little for saving space since the area underneath is usually too cramped for traffic- they will extend well into the room at a height that everyone but a 2-year old will find annoying (not to mention that 2-year olds don't stay that short very long and eventually will want to reach up and hang on them). Since the space underneath is wasted, you might be much better off with stands that will lift the speakers to the height of the plates and thus hide these from view. This will also be safer and provide better sound.

    That said, you can easily mount 25lb. speakers if you ensure that you are drilling into something solid behind the drywall. If you do mount, consider that you will need enough space for the speakers, the brackets behind them and any extra space for angling them towards the optimal listening position. That's a lot of weight hanging out there and so you might want to consider getting something more wall mountable and use the JBLs somewhere else instead. Personally, I like the W3 from Axiom Audio (http://www.axiomaudio.com/wallspeakers.html) or if you have more money to spend, you might want to consider the ones I settled on, the Vienna Weberns (http://www.sumikoaudio.net/va/prod_webern.htm#spec), which also sound pretty incredible for on-wall speakers. Both will come with wall-mounting brackets and instructions.
    Yeah, and those things could fall on the 2 year old.

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