Comments on: The Audacity of Hope, Ark.: The $20,000 Klipsch Palladium P-39F speaker
Klipsch's new flagship speaker, the Palladium P39F, makes a bold and beautiful statement: American high-end audio is alive and kicking.
Klipsch's new flagship speaker, the Palladium P39F, makes a bold and beautiful statement: American high-end audio is alive and kicking.
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Klipsch isn't even on the radar of most people who really call themselves "audiophiles", and many of them actively deride the company's products. They're a small cut above Bose consumer speakers, another product which is 99% overpriced hype, and rarely recommended by anyone who actually knows what real music sounds like. (although I do hear they market some noise-cancelling headphones which work pretty well)
From what I can tell, Klipsch products improved a little after Paul Klipsch died and his kids took over the business, but they still insist on putting those godawful horns in most of their speakers, and the fact that they do this while most of their competitors don't isn't because they have a magical insight and ingenuity that no one else in the world has - it's because most smart speaker designers that value accurate sound reproduction abandoned that architecture 40 years ago for very good reasons.
Paul Klipsch is one of the founding fathers of Hi-fidelity, his contributions to speaker design and audio technology as a whole still serve as the cornerstone of the entire audio industry. In fact it is no coincidence that the term High-Fidelity was coined about the same time he started producing his legendary speaker systems. His 1946 invention of the Klipschorn speaker system was the world?s first true High-Fidelity system. It was the first time a speaker was able to reproduce the entire frequency range with unerring fidelity in a home setting.
Paul Klipsch was a verifiable genius who holds patents in the fields of geophysics, ballistics and acoustics. His contributions to the world of audio have not gone unnoticed; he received the Audio Engineering Society's highest honor, the prestigious Silver Medal, for his contributions to speaker design and distortion measurement. He was inducted into several ?Hall of Fames?, including the Science & Industry Hall of Fame with the likes of Alfred Einstein, the Audio Hall of Fame, the Consumer Electronics Hall of fame, and the Engineering and Science Hall of Fame, an honor shared by Thomas Edison, George Washington Carver and the Wright brothers.
But seriously, you sound like you know a lot about transducer design and whatnot. You must be an excellent engineer, so good luck with all of that.
i could buy enough speakers to run a live concert in a stadium on 20k
they better sound like the voice of GOD for that price
- by thundert00th September 8, 2008 6:31 PM PDT
- other things i could do with 20k
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- by ndgoalie35 November 11, 2008 1:29 PM PST
- Your pretty optimistic for what you can do with 20k. Depending on where you go to college, it would only give you semester of tuition.
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(7 Comments)quit my job and be a full time college student instead of having to work to pay for college
get an apartment
go to a bit better college
buy a better car
buy gas for the car i already have until we run completely out of oil
feed the starving people in Africa for a few weeks