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????
1) You're moving into an extremely small room. Any extremely loud system in an enclosed space like that is just going to make your ears bleed. The Onkyo is going to be plenty loud enough under those conditions. In fact, you probably won't be able to stand it turned up much over the 3/4 mark. And even if you can...
2) Are you
trying to piss off your neighbors? At my old college you got fined if you made enough noise to interfere with the sleep or study of other students. If you just want to annoy people there are ways to do that without spending $500.
3) A sub won't make your system "louder". Tying a monster sub into a cheap-o receiver is just counterproductive and dumb.
4) What is the system
for? Listening to music? Watching movies? Getting in trouble with the adminstration and your dorm/house mates?

This forum is obviously geared towards home theater, so that's where most of our expertise lies. If you've got a completely different application in mind, you might get better advice elsewhere.
5) If you just want a noisemaker, check websites for musicians and theater managers. You can probably pick up a good auditorium-style amp/speaker combo that can be heard on the other side of campus.
Regards,
Joe
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JohnRice
- John Rice
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You definitely don't want an HTiB. The speakers won't be up to the task. It seems that sound quality is a far second to sheer output, so what you want is extremely sensitive speakers, probably with a fairly large woofer. What you need to understand is that LOUD is not so much a function of the receiver or amp as it is of the speakers. Probably the best way to go is either Cerwin Vega, or a passive PA type speaker like
THIS. Those Behringer PA speakers will flatten the Frat even if you powered them with an AM radio. Maybe throw in a commercial sub. You'll be the hero of the frat. Of course, you'll all be deaf and one day you'll want to slashburn the whole lot, but damn they'll be louder than anything.
BTW, that main speaker spec you should be concerned with is sensitivity. You want something near or over 100 dB.
They flutter behind you, your possible pasts.
Some bright-eyed and crazy, some frightened and lost.
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JohnRice
- John Rice
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I think Seth is making this unnecessarily complicated. You can use a regular receiver and just fashion speaker cables with bare wires on one end to connect to the receiver and 1/4" jacks on the other end to plug into the speakers. You can get the plugs at Radio Shack. The only reason they use this type of connection is to make them simple for repeated connecting and disconnecting, as with someone doing parties. In the end, the speakers I linked to are just plain old, unpowered speakers. They are simply very sensitive and have cabinets that are designed for abuse.
Don't pay any attention to the power ratings on the speakers. Speakers like this don't "Have" power. Those ratings are just essentially useless guidelines of what they can handle. If you pumped 280 watts into those speakers, you would render anyone within a one block radius completely deaf. 1 watt would be enough to drive anyone in your frat out opf the room.
They flutter behind you, your possible pasts.
Some bright-eyed and crazy, some frightened and lost.
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JohnRice
- John Rice
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I don't know why not. That receiver may be a good match. Just realize it has virtually no inputs, so you are limited on sources, and is just 2 channel, so no surround. It doesn't appear to be set up to use a subwoofer, which could be a larger limitation. That doesn't mean you can use a sub, just that you are limited on which ones and how they connect. You'd need one with speaker level inputs/outputs. The upside is, that receiver appears to be built for abuse.
They flutter behind you, your possible pasts.
Some bright-eyed and crazy, some frightened and lost.
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JohnRice
- John Rice
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You'll need a source, but that could be an iPod or computer, from what I can tell. I didn't look closely at the speakers, but if they are powered, that should do the trick. You also need to iron out however they connect to the source, but I wouldn't think it would be very complicated.
They flutter behind you, your possible pasts.
Some bright-eyed and crazy, some frightened and lost.