Vivid Audio Introduces Giya Cu Loudspeakers
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CH Precision and Audiovector with TechDAS at High End Munich 2025
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LATEST ADDITIONS

Quad 405 power amplifier

This is something we don't see too often: an entirely new approach to power amplifier design. As Quad points out in its literature for the 405, class-A operation of transistors provides the lowest distortion, but drastically limits the amount of power an output transistor can deliver without overheating. (Most transistor amps use class-AB output operation, in which each of a pair of power transistors handles part of each signal cycle and shuts down during the other part. Imperfect synchronism between the two halves causes the familiar "crossover distortion," which accounts for most solid-state sound. In class-A operation, each output transistor draws current though the entirety of each signal cycle, eliminating the crossover transition but doubling the amount of time current is drawn, and thus tending to cause the transistor to heat up more.)
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Etymotic Research ER-4S Canal Phone earspeakers

The cab's outside, the plane leaves in 50 minutes. Let's see...<A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//amplificationreviews/530/">HeadRoom Supreme</A>, <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com//accessoryreviews/531/">HeadRoom Bag</A>, portable CD player, CDs, Etymotic ER-4S Canal Phones....Oh, yeah&mdash;mustn't forget luggage or plane tickets. Guess I'm set to go.</I>

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The Sound of Surprise (the loudspeaker/stand interface)

One of the great imponderables in hi-fi is how much the vibrations of a dynamic loudspeaker's cabinet walls contribute to its overall sound quality. Studies by William Stevens in the mid-1970s showed that, with some speakers, the acoustic output of the enclosure could be almost as much as that from the drive-units. Since then, responsible speaker designers have worked hard either to damp cabinet vibrations or to shift them to higher frequencies where their effect on the music will be less deleterious.
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Epos ES 14 loudspeaker

Americans might be forgiven if they haven't heard of Epos. A small, British specialist loudspeaker manufacturer, it was founded in 1983 by its designer, Robin Marshall—an ex-BBC engineer and a onetime consultant to Monitor Audio, according to Roy Hall of Epos's US importer, Music Hall. Their first model, the ES 20, didn't make it to the US, and was apparently a bit too pricey in the UK to make much of a splash there (about £700, $1300 at the current rate of exchange—a mint in a country with the patent on sub-$500/pair (UK prices!) two-ways). In 1986 or thereabouts, the new, smaller ES 14 was introduced, using updated versions of the same drivers in a smaller, ported cabinet. Music Hall only recently began importing the Epos into the US.
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