Our job is
to make speakers that sound good, as well as scoring high in audio tests. You
may think this sounds silly, but what’s really silly is that many speaker
makers construct their speakers to deliver the ideal frequency curves when
tested in echo-free (anechoic) testing chambers. Who lives in an echo-free
testing chamber? No one we know.
Why this
standard, you might ask. Many years ago, some sound engineers decided to apply
what was, to say the least, a peculiar standard: namely, if a speaker had a
straight frequency response in an echo-free (anechoic) test chamber, then the
speaker's frequency curve would also be straight in a room at home. However,
it's not that simple - the acoustics in a padded test chamber and those in your
living room have nothing in common. If you've never been in an anechoic
chamber, then you should know that the acoustics there resemble those of a
small closet filled with winter overcoats.
In an
ordinary room at home, on the other hand, all sorts of sounds are reflected as
they bounce off walls, floors, ceilings, furniture, etc. If you put a conventional
speaker in a room at home and measure the frequency response, it will be
anything but straight.
Today, you
will find Audio Pro in over thirty countries on four continents. If you ask the
owner of an Audio Pro system what sets us apart from other speaker
manufacturers, you will probably get a range of answers. Many speak of the
magically pure bass, or what good sound quality they got for their investment,
or in more ephemeral terms: “it just sounds so good... you can feel it!” It’s
hard to describe a listening experience in words. There are only 26 letters in
the English alphabet, but each of the marvelously complex mechanisms that are
your ears contain 20,000-30,000 sensors that transmit the nuances of the sound
image to your brain. Use them to judge for yourself. Listen...
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