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#1
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Revox Agora B. Tri-amped Speakers. Any opinions?
Just out of curiosity for audacious (and old) hardwa Does anyone have a first hand experience of these speakers? Do you know what is the difference (if any) between the "Agora B" and the "Agora B, Mark II"? Revox, incidentally, continues to make speakers www.revox.de some of them fully active, multi-amped, and certainly very expensive. For some reason this production goes largely unnoticed. |
#2
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When I was very young, I really admired the sound of and look of Tandberg
equipment, but shortly after they released their monoblocks, they went poof in the US audio market. Can anyone explan this phenomenon? As far as I could tell they had everything going for them. Thanks! Erik |
#3
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"Erik Squires" said:
When I was very young, I really admired the sound of and look of Tandberg equipment, but shortly after they released their monoblocks, they went poof in the US audio market. Can anyone explan this phenomenon? As far as I could tell they had everything going for them. Well, for one thing, they're a Norwegian company. Tandberg has a long history of making tapedecks, electronics came later in the '70s. Many of their tapedecks were exported to the US, when there apparently wasn't much competition for them. All of this changed later, and I think they simply couldn't compete with the many US brands that are available. Too bad indeed, they made some cool gear. -- Sander deWaal Vacuum Audio Consultancy |
#4
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"Erik Squires" wrote in message
ervers.com When I was very young, I really admired the sound of and look of Tandberg equipment, but shortly after they released their monoblocks, they went poof in the US audio market. Can anyone explan this phenomenon? Tandberg was very sucessful in a low-volume way for many years with their high-performance open-reel recorders. They made a evolutionary series of recorders with a unique easy-to-use mechanical joystick mechanisms. Their equipment was relatively small for what it was, and tastefully-designed. When the Japanese flooded the market with really pretty good open reel recorders, Tandberg had new competition. The Japanese eventually developed solenoid-operated mechanisms. They had a lot of flash and glitter with lots of polished metal, heavy cast chassis, and really pretty good performance. They had vast development, manufacturing, distribution, service, sales and marketing organizations behind them. The audio business itself changed, when appliance stores set up their own audio salons, and audio moved out of specialty stores into the mainstream. Some place along the way the audio cassette became the mainstream product and Tandberg had to redesign from scratch. When the market broadened, they couldn't keep up. As far as I could tell they had everything going for them. They were trying to compete way out of their league. |
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