There are so many ways to design and build a high-quality loudspeaker that thinking outside the box has become a requisite simply to remain in the game. If, in 1977, you asked someone on the streets of Denmark what was required to build a decent-sounding speaker, he or she might have said “high-quality drivers” or “decent cabinet construction” -- or, if really clever, “flat frequency response.” Pose the same question to someone in the offices of Dynaudio and your question would most likely have been countered with another: “Well, what kind of speaker?”
Since Dynaudio’s founding, in 1977, the company’s culture has always been one of thinking outside the box. They understood then, and maintain to this day, that the sound of any loudspeaker will be colored unless transient response, phase, timing, dynamic ability, etc., are addressed. This is commonly accepted today, but in 1977, Dynaudio was far ahead of the curve. Over the years, this philosophy has matured into a “design DNA” possessed by every Dynaudio loudspeaker. So at the 2011 High End show in Munich, Germany, it was no surprise that, when Dynaudio revealed the all-new Focus 260 ($4900 USD per pair), the speaker was not simply an update of the Focus 220 II, which it replaces, but a reinvention.
View the full article



Pristupi
Registruj se

Nazad na vrh











