BuyDig via eBay has (Certified Klipsch Refurbished)
Klipsch R-41SA Dolby Atmos Elevation Surround Speaker Set (pair) on sale for
$133.
Shipping is free.
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SickerDealer for finding this deal.
Features:- Dolby Atmos add-on speakers
- Designed to sit on top of floor-standing front or back speakers
- Drivers are angled up to reflect sound off the ceiling, for a heightened soundstage and overhead effects
- Connect to a Dolby Atmos compatible receiver's height channels
- Can also be used as wall-mounted standard surround speakers
- 90° x 90° Tractrix horn with 1" LTS (Linear Travel Suspension) aluminum tweeter
- 4" spun copper IMG (injection-molded graphite) woofer
- Acoustic suspension (sealed) cabinet design
- Frequency response: conforms to Dolby Atmos specification
- Impedance: 8 ohms compatible
- Sensitivity: conforms to Dolby Atmos specification
- Power handling: up to 50 watts RMS (100 watts peak)
- MDF cabinet with durable textured wood grain vinyl finish
- Anti-vibration rubber feet and built-in keyhole slot wall-mounting brackets (mounting screws not included)
- Gold-plated binding post speaker terminals
- 5-3/4"W x 7"H x 13"D
- Weight: 6 lbs. each
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Most are saying you dont even need to match the center channel anymore.
The only speakers that really need to be voice-matched (same brand/line) are your front three - left, center, and right. That's because sound pans across them constantly (dialogue, effects moving across the screen), and mismatched speakers can make those transitions noticeable.
Matching your surrounds is good, but it matters less, and your height/Atmos speakers matter even less because they're mostly handling ambient and directional effects, so differences in tone aren't nearly as obvious.
So from a sound perspective, it's totally fine to mix brands for heights. Matching everything is great for aesthetics and consistency, not necessity.
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