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Move onto the bigger marble speakers and you gain SPL handling, looks and sheer toe-smashing power.
Crossover apparently sucks, but this Dennis Murphy fella apparently fixed that, but I can't say for sure.
Bigger Prisms: Awesome looks but the sound didn't work for me. I punished them by connecting a miswired amplifier to them and blowing them up. That taught 'em a lesson they'll never forget.The way I figure if you buy from any company with a large geographical gap it's going to be cost-prohibitive to send broke stuff back and forth. Luckily none of the speakers ever broke. They are also packed excellently with magical fantastical expanding foam stuff and thick cardboard. Props for that.
Norh Pyramids flat out suck. Avoid unless you like awful, indistinct sound.
I use Ikea for my "equipment rack":http://www.ikea.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?topcategoryId=15558&catalogId=10103&storeId=12&productId=11460&langId=-1&categoryId=15620&chosenPartNumber=9569950720.5 inches wide x 15.75 inches deep x 22.875 inches tall. The top, bottom and sides are 1.3 inches thick and it has an adjustable shelf in the middle. I left the casters off so that the spindles act as spikes through my carpet to the concrete slab below. A 2nd one acts as a side table at the listening chair and allows for an extra shelf for the rack. $90 shipped for both.Other small/single driver good quality speakers are out there. Check out Omega, AV.123, and others right here at AC. I use Ascend Acoustics and love them.Regarding your 60 wpc: try to find test tones and a sound pressure meter to find out what frequencies and how loud you really listen. Most are amazed to find out that they've way overestimated how loud and how low they listen. Unless you have "young taste" or want hearing loss, any speaker will use less than 1 watt for average audiophile playback levels. (Long term exposure to 85 dB will result in permanent hearing loss and possible pain.) However the extra power is useful, to handle peaks cleanly as clipped signals (where the amp suddenly runs out of power) is the quickest way to ruin a driver, especially tweeters. (That's another advantage of single driver speakers.)