Myles B. Astor
Active member
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2013
- Messages
- 2,884
I've already talked about it.
Actually, it is the new graphene based woofers cones that are lighter and stiffer...
From your argument, one can claim that the new F35 fighter plane has no innovation in it since the Wright Brothers flown a plane 100 years ago.
So if that is you qualification of innovation, then yes I will give you that, Magico have not found a new way to produce sound. But it sure found many ways to reduce the common issues loudspeakers have. If you are dismissing these facts (see objective data in many publications), this conversation can’t really go anywhere.
You clearly will not be happy to be proven wrong so lets just move on...
Interesting as Spock would say. This initial post was that Magico's tech is behind other speaker manufacturers (clearly not the case nor did anyone say it was superior, just what they did) has turned into the usual bunch of Magico bashing.
If anyone thinks they know what ANY product sounds like until they have it their own system, they are sadly mistaken. And that's a fact. Until you have all the time to sit and spend honing the setup, one's conclusions are always suspect. That includes cables, amps, etc to get a full picture.
Let me also give a pearl of wisdom that I have learned over the years. Products that knock your socks off right away rarely stand the test of time because the ear is honing in more on the brain's more primitive limbic, fight or flight response. For instance, consider the hyper detailed period of the '90s in audio.
OTOH, products that leave you ho hum at the beginning often with extended listening just begin to sound right and like music.
Wow...your reading comprehension must not be very developed. I don't even know what to say to this. And please don't presume to know whether I will or will not be happy to be proven wrong. I stated that I would be happy to be proven wrong and when you present me with facts and data to the contrary, I will be happy to admit so. But in order for you to do that, you will have to start presenting data-driven specifics vs. the amorphous and gross generalities that you seem to prefer to stick with.
And buddy, I used to head up the Industrials Equity Research team at a major investment house and I personally covered Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Boeing, and there are plenty of innovations (new principles never implemented before in aerospace applications) in the F-22 and F-35 in the areas of materials science, aerospace structures, avionics/radar systems, and pilot/plane control interfaces that were first thought of, designed and implemented in those two platforms.
We agree on one thing, let's move on because this is going no where fast.
I think it was the extreme position taken by LVB that caused others to throw down the gauntlet so to speak. He basically inferred (and not so subtly) that only Magico has true innovation in their speakers and most people are too dumb to separate innovation from marketing.
I think it's how you define innovation. In audio --as in most industries-- there's little innovation. (Let me ask though-don't you think the real companies come up with these new products with some idea that they'll be used in other new and creative applications?) But what leading companies do is recognize and incorporate new technologies. Did cj invent Teflon caps? Hell no. But they recognized and realized the cap's potential (after all it was only available in very small values up to then) and used it to improve their equipment's sound. Did Dan D'Agostino invent surface mount tech or wave soldering? Hell no. But Krell was located in that high tech, military supplier area of CT and he too realized the benefits of these new technologies. (Oh yes, maybe he does deserve some credit for finding all the problems with wave soldering in the 250).
Adam (and LVB)...can you please tell me what technical innovation Magico has brought to the table?
Well said Adam. Btw, you forgot to mention Magico's patented ellyptical symmetry crossover technology and computer-modelled polycarbonate midrange enclosure designed using Finite Element analysis modeling tools, both of which are unique to Magico.I believe they pioneered using nanotubes (carbon ones) to stiffen their diaphrams and now doing the same with graphene. Those are two genuine innovations that spring to mind, but there may be other.
But more than pure innovation, I believe they excel as combining various state of the art technologies in a single product.
Have they been the first to use aluminium to build a speaker ? No, there was Goldmund with their Apologue model back in 1986 (and someone even mentioned in this thread Celestion in mid 70s).
Have they been the first to use a frame system, to brace the walls to increase speaker's stiffness ? No, the credit must go to B&W and their Matrix series models.
Have they been the first to use berillium tweeter ? No, Yamaha did that in late 70s in their NS1000 model.
Have they been the first to use carbon fibre to build speaker panels ? No, Wilson Benech launched a speaker with CF panels like 10 years ago, and Morel even builds a speaker that is entirely made of CF - the Fat Lady.
Clearly all of those technologies already existed before Magico started using them. However, Magico was the first company that combined them into a single product. That, plus the nanotubes and graphene technologies that nobody else uses, puts them at the very front of current loudspeaker technology.
Is there any other speaker that is more technologicly advanced on the market today than the Magico M-Project ? If there is one, I'm not aware of it.
I believe they pioneered using nanotubes (carbon ones) to stiffen their diaphrams and now doing the same with graphene. Those are two genuine innovations that spring to mind, but there may be other.
But more than pure innovation, I believe they excel as combining various state of the art technologies in a single product.
Have they been the first to use aluminium to build a speaker ? No, there was Goldmund with their Apologue model back in 1986 (and someone even mentioned in this thread Celestion in mid 70s).
Have they been the first to use a frame system, to brace the walls to increase speaker's stiffness ? No, the credit must go to B&W and their Matrix series models.
Have they been the first to use berillium tweeter ? No, Yamaha did that in late 70s in their NS1000 model.
Have they been the first to use carbon fibre to build speaker panels ? No, Wilson Benech launched a speaker with CF panels like 10 years ago, and Morel even builds a speaker that is entirely made of CF - the Fat Lady.
Clearly all of those technologies already existed before Magico started using them. However, Magico was the first company that combined them into a single product. That, plus the nanotubes and graphene technologies that nobody else uses, puts them at the very front of current loudspeaker technology.
Is there any other speaker that is more technologicly advanced on the market today than the Magico M-Project ? If there is one, I'm not aware of it.
I'll take my goosebumps over white papers and marketing BS any day.
Yes! An emotional connection to the music is what I'm looking for thru the sound chain ending with the speaker. The emotional connection is what leads to the irrational decision to spend silly sums to get there.![]()
And at the end of the day, that's what matters. All the technical advancements in the world are great, but not unless it results in connecting the listener emotionally to the music.
What a silly thread this has turned into - people hear what they want to hear and ignore what they don't want to hear. So many logical fallacies...
Anyhow, one of the oft repeated lines about our hobby is "One person's high-fi is another person's mid-fi". There's no way to prove right or wrong in a discussion like this - it's all opinion and bias.
Yes! An emotional connection to the music is what I'm looking for thru the sound chain ending with the speaker. The emotional connection is what leads to the irrational decision to spend silly sums to get there.![]()