Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
What are peoples thoughts on the true quality of Bang & Olufsen
products?? Sure, they are marketed well - look different and organic, and produce excellent sound and quality. But, do people really think their products prices are justified by such a huge premium over other sound equipment? Do they have that x-factor that appeals to the rich, and so are able to charge a big premium (that doesnt neccessarily equal that much better performance and quality) ? I'd be interested to know whether people thought the sound quality was really fantastically better than other brands. Its a similar story to Bose ... great name, great reputation - but is the product really THAT much superior, especially to justify the price? |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 02 Mar 2006 02:01:13 -0800, andrew_h wrote:
What are peoples thoughts on the true quality of Bang & Olufsen products?? Sure, they are marketed well - look different and organic, and produce excellent sound and quality. But, do people really think their products prices are justified by such a huge premium over other sound equipment? Do they have that x-factor that appeals to the rich, and so are able to charge a big premium (that doesnt neccessarily equal that much better performance and quality) ? I'd be interested to know whether people thought the sound quality was really fantastically better than other brands. Its a similar story to Bose ... great name, great reputation - but is the product really THAT much superior, especially to justify the price? What are you looking for? Something that looks classy and sounds expensive or something where the looks don't particularly matter, but the sound is superb? B&O fit very nicely into the first group. The sound quality is usually very good, but I personally probably couldn't live with it for a long time. On the other hand, if motorised sliding things and fancy lights do it for you then there's no argument! Bose - definitely not my cup of tea at all. IMHO they have lots of hype and fancy literature but generally sound pretty mediocre if you compare with good speakers. At the end of the day, its *your* ears and eyes that you have to please. -- Mick (Working in a M$-free zone!) Remove blockage to use my email address Web: http://www.nascom.info & http://mixpix.batcave.net |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "andrew_h" wrote in message oups.com... What are peoples thoughts on the true quality of Bang & Olufsen products?? **They look nice, but offer poor (sonic) value for money. Sure, they are marketed well - look different and organic, and produce excellent sound and quality. **Not for the Dollars spent. But, do people really think their products prices are justified by such a huge premium over other sound equipment? **That would need to be judged by the person buying the product. Many people value style over sound quality. Do they have that x-factor that appeals to the rich, and so are able to charge a big premium (that doesnt neccessarily equal that much better performance and quality) ? **Clearly, given their market success, yes. I'd be interested to know whether people thought the sound quality was really fantastically better than other brands. **Nope. Its a similar story to Bose ... great name, great reputation - but is the product really THAT much superior, especially to justify the price? **Not even close. Bose is cheap crap, selling for an obscenely high price. B&O is stylishly designed, often very well engineered, expensive equipment. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. Most Bose equipment
is poor in absolute terms whereas B&O is somewhat more presentale technically, but both are horribly overpriced and a sure sign of yuppity. |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Bret Ludwig" wrote in message
oups.com Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. Most Bose equipment is poor in absolute terms whereas B&O is somewhat more presentale technically, but both are horribly overpriced and a sure sign of yuppity. This sudden interest in price-effectiveness is quite refreshing, Bret, Perhaps you could help this guy "Fella" out? |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. Most Bose equipment is poor in absolute terms whereas B&O is somewhat more presentale technically, but both are horribly overpriced and a sure sign of yuppity. **And again: That is YOUR opinion. In a pure sonic sense, few arguments can be made to defend B&O (and none for Bose), but with it's unique styling, B&O may be the only alternative for many buyers. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 3 Mar 2006 08:39:36 +1100, "Trevor Wilson"
wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message roups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. Most Bose equipment is poor in absolute terms whereas B&O is somewhat more presentale technically, but both are horribly overpriced and a sure sign of yuppity. **And again: That is YOUR opinion. In a pure sonic sense, few arguments can be made to defend B&O (and none for Bose), but with it's unique styling, B&O may be the only alternative for many buyers. On any other Usenet group your argument might carry some weight, but not here. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Their equipment is very good looking, and expensive to service when the
warranty is finished. As for the sound quality, it is okay. For the money spent, you can do better with the more popular name brands. -- Jerry G. ====== "andrew_h" wrote in message oups.com... What are peoples thoughts on the true quality of Bang & Olufsen products?? Sure, they are marketed well - look different and organic, and produce excellent sound and quality. But, do people really think their products prices are justified by such a huge premium over other sound equipment? Do they have that x-factor that appeals to the rich, and so are able to charge a big premium (that doesnt neccessarily equal that much better performance and quality) ? I'd be interested to know whether people thought the sound quality was really fantastically better than other brands. Its a similar story to Bose ... great name, great reputation - but is the product really THAT much superior, especially to justify the price? |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Just to clear up - I didnt at any stage mean to infer that Bose and B&O
are equal on all levels.... just that both have niche markets I guess - or both have something of a cult status with certain buyers. I know people who swear black and blue by bose .. Also, the brand image with alot of people (who don't know a great deal about sound and sound quality) would instantly think "must be great" if its Bose. Who are B&O's main competitors??? Do they have any real out-and-out competitors ? |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Some excellent sound engineers, rich money-filled businessmen, and
great marketing men should get together and bring out a new audio brand to rival B&O. So much of what they sell is related to the image, and feel that their products GIVE to the buyers. Obviously the sound must be terrific, but the whole aura that surrounds their products would tend to persuade people that the product is better sounding. I reckon if they did a test of 100 people....blind-folded them, played music from two amps (which were identical), said one was B&O and one was a lesser (but still strong) brand, 99% would chose the B&O as the better. Assumign they knew of B&O. Perception ... that is the key to successful marketing. B&O is to speakers and sound equipment what Coke is to soft drinks. |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 3 Mar 2006 05:02:36 -0800, "andrew_h"
wrote: Just to clear up - I didnt at any stage mean to infer that Bose and B&O are equal on all levels.... just that both have niche markets I guess - or both have something of a cult status with certain buyers. I know people who swear black and blue by bose .. Also, the brand image with alot of people (who don't know a great deal about sound and sound quality) would instantly think "must be great" if its Bose. Who are B&O's main competitors??? Do they have any real out-and-out competitors ? Can't think of any that aren't actually in jail. B&O and Bose are very similar operations, they just operate in different sectors of the market. Image is everything. d Pearce Consulting http://www.pearce.uk.com |
#12
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 3 Mar 2006 08:39:36 +1100, "Trevor Wilson"
wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message roups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. Most Bose equipment is poor in absolute terms whereas B&O is somewhat more presentale technically, but both are horribly overpriced and a sure sign of yuppity. **And again: That is YOUR opinion. In a pure sonic sense, few arguments can be made to defend B&O (and none for Bose), but with it's unique styling, B&O may be the only alternative for many buyers. Sonically, that is no longer true. B&O CD players sound as good as anything on the market, are beautifully built, and are *much* more stylish than almost anything else. The latest line of B&O active speakers uses state of the art amplifier modules (also used by Rotel) and their 'acoustic lens' speaker technology really does work. A B&O system comprising any of their CD players and a pair of Lab 5 speakers is truly high end by any standard, and may even be regarded as good value in this rarefied market, at less than £15k for the lot. -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#13
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. Most Bose equipment is poor in absolute terms whereas B&O is somewhat more presentale technically, but both are horribly overpriced and a sure sign of yuppity. **And again: That is YOUR opinion. In a pure sonic sense, few arguments can be made to defend B&O (and none for Bose), but with it's unique styling, B&O may be the only alternative for many buyers. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#14
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. You are triventriliquating again. (That means you are talking out both sides of your mouth and your ass all at the same time.) Mcintosh also has unique styling and many of its customers feel it is the best looking line of audio equipment in the world. Whilst I understand the technical arguments against the autoformers as well as anyone, they do not harm the performance of McIntosh power amplifiers which measure very well. They don't sound all that superior but many solid state and some tube amps sound even worse. I feel the McIntosh autoformers combined with tube driven (as with Moscode) MOSFET outputs could be a very good thing. I am not impressed at all or respectful of McIntosh's reisue tube equipment, for several reasons. I do think they should stick with solid state if they don't believe in the genuine merit of tubes, and am certain they do not. Since Mcintosh amplifiers are not the most expensive brand to be had (but are certainly somewhat overpriced) one can not take excessive umbrage at their poor value for money. If you want to triventriliquate some more might I suggest you learn "Fugue for Tinhorns" from 'Guys and Dolls'? Then you could record it with three mics and a vintage 3 channel Ampex or Presto deck. |
#15
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ps.com... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. You are triventriliquating again. (That means you are talking out both sides of your mouth and your ass all at the same time.) **Prove it. Mcintosh also has unique styling and many of its customers feel it is the best looking line of audio equipment in the world. **Yep. That much is true. Personally, I reckon they look incredibly dated and clunky. However, style is a personal issue. Trouble is, you pay SO MUCH for that style. You sure don't get any sonic gains. Whilst I understand the technical arguments against the autoformers as well as anyone, they do not harm the performance of McIntosh power amplifiers which measure very well. **Yes, they do harm the performance of the amplifiers. They don't sound all that superior but many solid state and some tube amps sound even worse. **SUre. I agree that there are even more incompetently designed producs, than McIntosh. Not many, mind you. I feel the McIntosh autoformers combined with tube driven (as with Moscode) MOSFET outputs could be a very good thing. **Why? Please provide your technical reasons to support this assertion. I am not impressed at all or respectful of McIntosh's reisue tube equipment, for several reasons. I do think they should stick with solid state if they don't believe in the genuine merit of tubes, and am certain they do not. Since Mcintosh amplifiers are not the most expensive brand to be had (but are certainly somewhat overpriced) one can not take excessive umbrage at their poor value for money. **Sure one can. If McIntosh dumped the usage of autoformers, they could reduce their costs (and, hopefully, retail prices) significantly. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#16
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Mcintosh also has unique styling and many of its customers feel it is the best looking line of audio equipment in the world. **Yep. That much is true. Personally, I reckon they look incredibly dated and clunky. However, style is a personal issue. Trouble is, you pay SO MUCH for that style. You sure don't get any sonic gains. And B&O style is inexpensive???? I think it looks like overt form-over-function. Mc's look is at least something someone raised on Altec, WE, Ampex and other serious professional equipment can relate to. Whilst I understand the technical arguments against the autoformers as well as anyone, they do not harm the performance of McIntosh power amplifiers which measure very well. **Yes, they do harm the performance of the amplifiers. They still measure better than almost all their competitors. Not that, in my opinion, it matters. They don't sound all that superior but many solid state and some tube amps sound even worse. **SUre. I agree that there are even more incompetently designed producs, than McIntosh. Not many, mind you. I feel the McIntosh autoformers combined with tube driven (as with Moscode) MOSFET outputs could be a very good thing. **Why? Please provide your technical reasons to support this assertion. It would allow McIntosh to appeal to the desire of Mc purchasers to have vacuum tubes while providing a product which could meet the lowest measurements of distortion, at significantly lower build cost, and could-like the Moscode line-sound good to boot (as if that mattered.) I am not impressed at all or respectful of McIntosh's reisue tube equipment, for several reasons. I do think they should stick with solid state if they don't believe in the genuine merit of tubes, and am certain they do not. Since Mcintosh amplifiers are not the most expensive brand to be had (but are certainly somewhat overpriced) one can not take excessive umbrage at their poor value for money. **Sure one can. If McIntosh dumped the usage of autoformers, they could reduce their costs (and, hopefully, retail prices) significantly. They could not reduce their retail costs without lowering their profits and prestiege in the minds of their upscale purchasers as well. Mc prices its products according to what the market will bear at a certain "value plateau" and designs their product for their requisite profit margin whilst maintaining reasonable reliability and their signature superb measurements, which along with appearance and the prestiege of the McIntosh marque constitute the McIntosh value proposition. Mc's best measuring model to date was autoformerless. It was a rather poor seller, however. |
#17
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ps.com... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. I don't want to argue the relative merits of autoformer output amps, but does anyone know why McIntosh uses them, and what advantages they claim for them? They must have an argument of some sort, since I know of no other such designs. Norm Strong |
#18
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Mcintosh also has unique styling and many of its customers feel it is the best looking line of audio equipment in the world. **Yep. That much is true. Personally, I reckon they look incredibly dated and clunky. However, style is a personal issue. Trouble is, you pay SO MUCH for that style. You sure don't get any sonic gains. And B&O style is inexpensive???? **Read my comments about B&O. We are in complete agreement about B&O. I think it looks like overt form-over-function. **You're entitled to your opinion. However, B&O have always led the industry in various technological areas. The customer pays very dearly for that technological innovation (and the fact that the product is sourced from a First World nation). Mc's look is at least something someone raised on Altec, WE, Ampex and other serious professional equipment can relate to. **Not with those silly output autoformers. They are akin to bolting on a fifth wheel to a Ferrari. Whilst I understand the technical arguments against the autoformers as well as anyone, they do not harm the performance of McIntosh power amplifiers which measure very well. **Yes, they do harm the performance of the amplifiers. They still measure better than almost all their competitors. **No, they do not. The autoformers see to that. Not that, in my opinion, it matters. They don't sound all that superior but many solid state and some tube amps sound even worse. **SUre. I agree that there are even more incompetently designed producs, than McIntosh. Not many, mind you. I feel the McIntosh autoformers combined with tube driven (as with Moscode) MOSFET outputs could be a very good thing. **Why? Please provide your technical reasons to support this assertion. It would allow McIntosh to appeal to the desire of Mc purchasers to have vacuum tubes while providing a product which could meet the lowest measurements of distortion, at significantly lower build cost, and could-like the Moscode line-sound good to boot (as if that mattered.) **I see. Kinda like bolting a few wheels to a Ferrari. I am not impressed at all or respectful of McIntosh's reisue tube equipment, for several reasons. I do think they should stick with solid state if they don't believe in the genuine merit of tubes, and am certain they do not. Since Mcintosh amplifiers are not the most expensive brand to be had (but are certainly somewhat overpriced) one can not take excessive umbrage at their poor value for money. **Sure one can. If McIntosh dumped the usage of autoformers, they could reduce their costs (and, hopefully, retail prices) significantly. They could not reduce their retail costs without lowering their profits and prestiege in the minds of their upscale purchasers as well. **The autoformers add SIGNIFICANTLY to the cost of McIntosh products. Audio frequency transformers are expensive to manufacture, both in materials and labour. They also add significantly to the mass of the product and offer no performance benefits. Mc prices its products according to what the market will bear at a certain "value plateau" **Really? Prove it. Do you have access to their confidential costing systems? and designs their product for their requisite profit margin whilst maintaining reasonable reliability and their signature superb measurements, which along with appearance and the prestiege of the McIntosh marque constitute the McIntosh value proposition. Mc's best measuring model to date was autoformerless. It was a rather poor seller, however. **Which proves nothing, except that some buyers may be particularly stupid. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#19
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ps.com... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. I don't want to argue the relative merits of autoformer output amps, but does anyone know why McIntosh uses them, and what advantages they claim for them? **They make the amp heavy. * They allow McIntosh to offer a USP (Unique Selling Proposition) to gullible consumers. * They give McIntosh to charge more for the product. * They have this warm, fuzzy, old fashioned 'feel' about them. They must have an argument of some sort, since I know of no other such designs. **Not for the last 40 years anyway. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#20
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
B&O are 'interior design statements'.
geoff |
#21
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Trevor Wilson wrote: snip **You're entitled to your opinion. However, B&O have always led the industry in various technological areas. The customer pays very dearly for that technological innovation (and the fact that the product is sourced from a First World nation). Several US, UK and Continental European manufactured brands are available at much more reasonable prices than B&O (or McIntosh for that matter.) Mc's look is at least something someone raised on Altec, WE, Ampex and other serious professional equipment can relate to. **Not with those silly output autoformers. They are akin to bolting on a fifth wheel to a Ferrari. Nonsense on stilts. Altec used output and interstage transformers on several early solid state amplifiers. snip I am not impressed at all or respectful of McIntosh's reisue tube equipment, for several reasons. I do think they should stick with solid state if they don't believe in the genuine merit of tubes, and am certain they do not. Since Mcintosh amplifiers are not the most expensive brand to be had (but are certainly somewhat overpriced) one can not take excessive umbrage at their poor value for money. **Sure one can. If McIntosh dumped the usage of autoformers, they could reduce their costs (and, hopefully, retail prices) significantly. They could not reduce their retail costs without lowering their profits and prestiege in the minds of their upscale purchasers as well. **The autoformers add SIGNIFICANTLY to the cost of McIntosh products. Audio frequency transformers are expensive to manufacture, both in materials and labour. They also add significantly to the mass of the product and offer no performance benefits. Mc prices its products according to what the market will bear at a certain "value plateau" **Really? Prove it. Do you have access to their confidential costing systems? I have friends currently employed in Binghamton, whom of course I will not name here, but you can do your homework and find this is in line with what Mc executives have said publicly and privately for decades. The autoformers, and the tube Unity Coupled OPTs before them, are not terrifically expensive because Mc wind their own on machinery inexpensively built by themselves, by not terribly well paid labor-female, and resembling from my trips there, Shelley Winters' character from a pretty good movie late in her career called "Heavy". A pair cost less than $100 in cores, wire, and labor, you may be sure, except on the "full gallon" model. Keep in mind low build cost has always been a core component of McIntosh's business model. The most expensive products in their history build-cost-wise are some of their bigger speaker systems and the show-stoppingly superior (for its day) MR 78 tuner and even they were built more cheaply than one might think. A person I know who has worked at both Mc Binghamton and Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids once told me that had the MR78 been built at Cedar Rapids it woulod have cost $5000 in build cost Mc built one model of autoformerless heavy power amp and it was not well received by buyers. Several have found their way into transformer manufacturers' test labs, ironically, along with many autoformer SS models and the MI-200 tube triode amp. Mc does learn from experience pretty well. |
#22
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Karl Uppiano wrote: "Geoff@work" wrote in message ... B&O are 'interior design statements'. The WAF (Wife Approval Factor) is relevant in the hi-fi business... If you let wifey carry your balls around for you that's very true. That aside, if you are really serious about sound you need to marry one that thinks Klipschhorns are okay decor. |
#23
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5 Mar 2006 18:28:21 -0800, "Bret Ludwig"
wrote: Karl Uppiano wrote: "Geoff@work" wrote in message ... B&O are 'interior design statements'. Luckily, they also sound very good these days. The WAF (Wife Approval Factor) is relevant in the hi-fi business... If you let wifey carry your balls around for you that's very true. That aside, if you are really serious about sound you need to marry one that thinks Klipschhorns are okay decor. Nah, you don't really want a deaf wife........... -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering |
#24
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Don Pearce" wrote in message ... On 3 Mar 2006 05:02:36 -0800, "andrew_h" wrote: Just to clear up - I didnt at any stage mean to infer that Bose and B&O are equal on all levels.... just that both have niche markets I guess - or both have something of a cult status with certain buyers. I know people who swear black and blue by bose .. Also, the brand image with alot of people (who don't know a great deal about sound and sound quality) would instantly think "must be great" if its Bose. Who are B&O's main competitors??? Do they have any real out-and-out competitors ? Can't think of any that aren't actually in jail. B&O and Bose are very similar operations, they just operate in different sectors of the market. Image is everything. **Not even close. B&O actually innovate (or have innovated), whilst Bose merely takes the ideas of others, patents them through the hopelessly inept US Patent Office and litigates vigorously when it sees the need. More importantly and fundamentally, B&O is a public company, whose records are available for all to see. The profit margins are able to be seen, for those with a forensic eye for financial detail in a balance sheet. Bose, OTOH, is a private company. NO information is available to the public. Only Bose and the IRS know what is going on (and I doubt the IRS knows the true story). Bose is a secret and closed entity, solely geared to lining the pockets of Dr Amar Bose with as much money as can be taken from gullible consumers. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#25
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ups.com... Trevor Wilson wrote: snip **You're entitled to your opinion. However, B&O have always led the industry in various technological areas. The customer pays very dearly for that technological innovation (and the fact that the product is sourced from a First World nation). Several US, UK and Continental European manufactured brands are available at much more reasonable prices than B&O (or McIntosh for that matter.) **Sure. However, I have not seen any product which quite matches B&O's sense of style. Style, of course, being a completely personal issue. Mc's look is at least something someone raised on Altec, WE, Ampex and other serious professional equipment can relate to. **Not with those silly output autoformers. They are akin to bolting on a fifth wheel to a Ferrari. Nonsense on stilts. Altec used output and interstage transformers on several early solid state amplifiers. **The operative words being: ".....several EARLY solid state amplifiers." (My emphasis). In the early days, solid state amplification was expensive (transformers were cheaper than transistors), direct coupling was not often used and, more importantly, the current capabilites of power transistors was seriously limited. Transformers were necessary to allow reasonable current into laods, without adding extra (very expensive) output transistors. Things are very different now. Direct coupling and the low cost of transistors renders coupling transformers unnecessary. The low cost of providing high currents, at high Voltages renders output transformers completely superfluous. All they do is add mass, cost and volume. They also damage performance. snip I am not impressed at all or respectful of McIntosh's reisue tube equipment, for several reasons. I do think they should stick with solid state if they don't believe in the genuine merit of tubes, and am certain they do not. Since Mcintosh amplifiers are not the most expensive brand to be had (but are certainly somewhat overpriced) one can not take excessive umbrage at their poor value for money. **Sure one can. If McIntosh dumped the usage of autoformers, they could reduce their costs (and, hopefully, retail prices) significantly. They could not reduce their retail costs without lowering their profits and prestiege in the minds of their upscale purchasers as well. **The autoformers add SIGNIFICANTLY to the cost of McIntosh products. Audio frequency transformers are expensive to manufacture, both in materials and labour. They also add significantly to the mass of the product and offer no performance benefits. Mc prices its products according to what the market will bear at a certain "value plateau" **Really? Prove it. Do you have access to their confidential costing systems? I have friends currently employed in Binghamton, whom of course I will not name here, but you can do your homework and find this is in line with what Mc executives have said publicly and privately for decades. **Lack of response duly noted. The autoformers, and the tube Unity Coupled OPTs before them, are not terrifically expensive because Mc wind their own on machinery inexpensively built by themselves, by not terribly well paid labor-female, and resembling from my trips there, Shelley Winters' character from a pretty good movie late in her career called "Heavy". A pair cost less than $100 in cores, wire, and labor, you may be sure, except on the "full gallon" model. **Which is around US$90.00 more than the output transistors which could be used instead. Keep in mind low build cost has always been a core component of McIntosh's business model. **Nope. I have a reasonable idea of how much things cost to build. McIntosh amps are not cheap to build. The most expensive products in their history build-cost-wise are some of their bigger speaker systems and the show-stoppingly superior (for its day) MR 78 tuner and even they were built more cheaply than one might think. A person I know who has worked at both Mc Binghamton and Rockwell Collins in Cedar Rapids once told me that had the MR78 been built at Cedar Rapids it woulod have cost $5000 in build cost Mc built one model of autoformerless heavy power amp and it was not well received by buyers. Several have found their way into transformer manufacturers' test labs, ironically, along with many autoformer SS models and the MI-200 tube triode amp. Mc does learn from experience pretty well. **McIntosh know how to milk money form gullible consumers, by providing a USP that other amps do not have. Nothing more. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#26
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ps.com... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. I don't want to argue the relative merits of autoformer output amps, but does anyone know why McIntosh uses them, and what advantages they claim for them? **They make the amp heavy. * They allow McIntosh to offer a USP (Unique Selling Proposition) to gullible consumers. * They give McIntosh to charge more for the product. * They have this warm, fuzzy, old fashioned 'feel' about them. C'mon Trevor, there must be some plausible excuse. I can't believe the McIntosh design team got together and agreed on the arguments you mentioned. They must have some technical reason for this design. After all, they could have made it heavier by just using a bigger power xfmr. Is it possible that an autoformer was the way they chose to secure the same ouput power at any load impedance, instead of the usual constant voltage out, which would make the maximum output inversely proportional to the load Z? That has a sensible ring to it. Instead of X watts out into 8 ohms and 2X into 4 ohms, they can offer a unform power output at any nominal load Z. What do you think? Norm |
#27
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... "Trevor Wilson" wrote in message ... "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message ps.com... Trevor Wilson wrote: "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Neither B&O nor Bose offer good value for money. **That would be YOUR opinion. For many of those who purchase B&O, it offers a sense of style not provided by other products and, hence, represents good value. Bose, OTOH, represents extremely poor value for money, since other products can offer more for less. I suggest to you, however, that, due to the prescence of wasteful output autoformers, that McIntosh amplifiers represent spectacularly bad value for money. I don't want to argue the relative merits of autoformer output amps, but does anyone know why McIntosh uses them, and what advantages they claim for them? **They make the amp heavy. * They allow McIntosh to offer a USP (Unique Selling Proposition) to gullible consumers. * They give McIntosh to charge more for the product. * They have this warm, fuzzy, old fashioned 'feel' about them. C'mon Trevor, there must be some plausible excuse. **Why? What is wrong with my reasons? They are perfectly valid and some can be used to excuse the existence of some tube amps (notably SETs). I can't believe the McIntosh design team got together and agreed on the arguments you mentioned. They must have some technical reason for this design. After all, they could have made it heavier by just using a bigger power xfmr. **I provided FOUR reasons, not one. Is it possible that an autoformer was the way they chose to secure the same ouput power at any load impedance, instead of the usual constant voltage out, which would make the maximum output inversely proportional to the load Z? That has a sensible ring to it. **Not to any sane person. Speakers are not resistors. Speakers (usually) present a lot of reactive components in their impedance characteristic. A transformer is exactly what is NOT needed. Instead of X watts out into 8 ohms and 2X into 4 ohms, they can offer a unform power output at any nominal load Z. **In the real world, even that does not apply. Transformers REFLECT the impedance of the load into the amplifier. What do you think? **I think my reasons are perfectly valid and logical. -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#28
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Trevor Wilson wrote: I don't want to argue the relative merits of autoformer output amps, but does anyone know why McIntosh uses them, and what advantages they claim for them? **They make the amp heavy. * They allow McIntosh to offer a USP (Unique Selling Proposition) to gullible consumers. * They give McIntosh to charge more for the product. * They have this warm, fuzzy, old fashioned 'feel' about them. C'mon Trevor, there must be some plausible excuse. **Why? What is wrong with my reasons? They are perfectly valid and some can be used to excuse the existence of some tube amps (notably SETs). I can't believe the McIntosh design team got together and agreed on the arguments you mentioned. They must have some technical reason for this design. After all, they could have made it heavier by just using a bigger power xfmr. **I provided FOUR reasons, not one. Is it possible that an autoformer was the way they chose to secure the same ouput power at any load impedance, instead of the usual constant voltage out, which would make the maximum output inversely proportional to the load Z? That has a sensible ring to it. **Not to any sane person. Speakers are not resistors. Speakers (usually) present a lot of reactive components in their impedance characteristic. A transformer is exactly what is NOT needed. Instead of X watts out into 8 ohms and 2X into 4 ohms, they can offer a unform power output at any nominal load Z. It's an assumption that a speaker is the load. A safe one today, but in McIntosh history a LOT of Mc amps were sold to drive motors, small shake tables, load coils, and a cornucopia of weird loads. Some of those had bizarre characteristics. The solid state autoformer circuit was developed back then and they have stuck with it. Attempts on their part to get away from it have been met with buyer resistance. Mc sells their customers what they want, within limits. The fact is the Mc amplifier is a successful product at an excellent profit margin whether or not you like it, Trevor. They will probably be building them after both of us are dead and buried, so I'd just get over it. Mc electronics are not cheap compared with typical mass market consumer equipment but as compared to military or telecom grade equipment or first tier test equipment it's obvious many cost cutting measures are used. Electrolytics are a consumer grade, the chassis is bent up of prechromed mild steel and silkscreened rather than aluminum sandcast or extrusion or a welded steel then polished and triple plated and engraved or stamped. Circuit boards are the common fiberglass and not conformal coated. Wire is the common stuff and passives, caps and resistors, are the regular kind and no high dollar audiophile parts are used even where all other "high end" manufacturers do. Tube models are built with power tubes on the PCB, which is quite objectionable. Output is by open binding posts even on models that could put lethal voltages on them. A Mark Levinson or Rowland or Krell by contrast uses much better parts and more expensive chassis, not that the sound necessarily benefits, buit the build cost is higher. In my opinion, in these price classes construction should rival Tek scopes of Vollum vintage, Collins avionics, telco CO equipment. Mc is more reminiscent of Fender guitar amps or early 60s Zenith TVs. |
#29
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... Mc electronics are not cheap compared with typical mass market consumer equipment but as compared to military or telecom grade equipment or first tier test equipment it's obvious many cost cutting measures are used. Electrolytics are a consumer grade, the chassis is bent up of prechromed mild steel and silkscreened rather than aluminum sandcast or extrusion or a welded steel then polished and triple plated and engraved or stamped. Circuit boards are the common fiberglass and not conformal coated. Wire is the common stuff and passives, caps and resistors, are the regular kind and no high dollar audiophile parts are used even where all other "high end" manufacturers do. Tube models are built with power tubes on the PCB, which is quite objectionable. Output is by open binding posts even on models that could put lethal voltages on them. A Mark Levinson or Rowland or Krell by contrast uses much better parts and more expensive chassis, not that the sound necessarily benefits, buit the build cost is higher. In my opinion, in these price classes construction should rival Tek scopes of Vollum vintage, Collins avionics, telco CO equipment. Mc is more reminiscent of Fender guitar amps or early 60s Zenith TVs. Do you actually WORK for McIntosh, or just suck their cocks ? geoff |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Some Recording Techniques | Pro Audio | |||
common mode rejection vs. crosstalk | Pro Audio | |||
Artists cut out the record biz | Pro Audio |