I have a room targeted for my future sound system. It's roughly 25 by 20, but since it is a 1950s era home the ceiling is only 7' 6". What do the Klipsch experts here think would be the best match? Cornwalls? Fortes? ..............
Klipsch Jubilees, if you can afford them. Bigger horns with their directivity can better handle smaller rooms. All things being equal, bigger is generally always better when it comes to horns.
Otherwise, you still could consider Klipschorns, since you at least have proper room width and length—and could get adequate distance from them. Audition them first in large rooms with tall ceilings. See how they sound to you. (Where do you live? I’m sure you could hear a pair or two in AK members’ spaces. Mine, not perfectly set up, are in PA.)
Then go ahead and get a pair and put them in your space. If they’re too constrained, return/sell them and downsize, maybe to Belles or La Scalas or Cornwalls. My brother has La Scalas in a small temporary room with low ceilings. His listening room is by far his stereo’s biggest weakness. They sound really good but caged there—but he’s used to the sound. He’s also moving to a bigger house in about a year or so, so he’ll have a bigger dedicated listening room eventually.
Before I bought my Klipschorns, I had heard and auditioned them in different places. It was only after auditioning a pair in a small, narrow basement salon with low ceilings—where they were mated badly to expensive SS amps, placed much too close together, not at all sealed to corners, and sounded horrible—that I even considered anything beyond corner placement as being essential.
The dealer told us they would suck before he fired them up. And they did. Big time. My wife was with me, hearing them for the first time. Totally soured her. She told me—with good reason—that never would she allow those awful sounding speakers the size of refrigerators into our house. I couldn’t convince her they were badly installed there and could sound much better until she finally heard one just sitting in the middle of a big, tall room in our house. She said, “It sounds amazing, like a totally different speaker.”
If I’d had your large room, I still would have probably gotten a pair. It was only later, after talking at length to Klipsch employees, that I learned about adequate ceiling height and what extreme lengths PWK went to in order to seal them properly to corners in dealerships he visited where they were improperly installed. They’re extremely temperamental beasts. But they reward attention.