Tannoy E11 loudspeaker

Tannoy E11 loudspeaker

The Tannoy E11 ($349/pair) is the company's least-expensive model in a wide range of consumer loudspeakers. Tannoy is most often known for its professional models, especially their nearfield, dual-concentric monitors that have become de rigueur on the top of recording consoles. The E11 is a two-way, ported design with a 6.5" woofer and 1" dome tweeter. Both drivers are manufactured by Tannoy, instead of being sourced from a driver manufacturer. The woofer is made from a polyolefin co-polymer, a plastic material with high rigidity and good self-damping properties. To improve power handling and increase sensitivity, the voice-coil is edge-wound on a Kapton former. The surround appears to be made of butyl rubber.

A Surprisingly Successful Dual Driver Headphone: The Enigmacoustics Dharma D1000 Measurements

A Surprisingly Successful Dual Driver Headphone: The Enigmacoustics Dharma D1000 Measurements

ENIGMAcoustics
Irvine, California, USA
sales@ENIGMAcoustics.com
(949)340-7590
http://www.enigmacoustics.com

A Surprisingly Successful Dual Driver Headphone: The Enigmacoustics Dharma D1000

A Surprisingly Successful Dual Driver Headphone: The Enigmacoustics Dharma D1000

This story originally appeared at InnerFidelity.com

The room was crazy loud at CES last year, but even through the cacophony the new dual-driver (dynamic/electret) Enigmacoustics Dharma had something special.

The question is how special?

GoldenEar Event in Manhattan Saturday

GoldenEar Event in Manhattan Saturday

Saturday, December 19, from noon –7pm, Sandy Gross, president of GoldenEar Technology, will be at Manhattan high-end audio retailer Stereo Exchange (627 Broadway, New York) demonstrating GoldenEar loudspeakers, including the Triton One, Stereophile's Joint Loudspeaker of 2015, as well as the new SuperSub XXL. Sandy will also be there to answer all your questions, and to talk about the speakers, the design process and his 40+ years in the audio industry.

To the Simple, Everything Appears Simple

To the Simple, Everything Appears Simple

My spirits sank as I read the comments on Stereophile's Facebook page. In the November issue, we had published reviews of UpTone Audio's USB Regen device by Kalman Rubinson, Michael Lavorgna, and myself. Michael and Kal had enthused about the positive effect the USB Regen had made, but I could detect no measurable difference. On Facebook, Dan Madden had written, "I think a device like this would need a blind listening test to verify that a listener could hear the difference in a statistically measurable way, in a very high percentage of times."
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