Wood Cones, JVC EX-A1 $550


Just curious if anyone has heared this thing yet. They have a small artical about it in the Aug 2004 issue of Playboy.
This minisystem has those wooden cones that are made by soaking them in Sake.

Anyone heared this yet? impressions?

Im curious if we will start seeing more wooden speakers on the market soon.
slappy
I saw a post on this after my neighbor mentioned it to me...saw that you had responded to it also Slappy...when I read the article, I noticed that this guy at JVC had been working on this technology for 20 years and was trying to better the technologies/cone materials of the time...well...seems like the technologies have already advanced...kevlar, etc...so I think this guy is a day late and a dollar short.

Plus...i went to a site that had the specs...they listed the amp at 30w into a 4ohm load w/ 10% distortion...obviously these are some pretty inefficient speakers.

I told my neighbor that as much as I would like to see him buy it...only to hook up the speakers to my rig and see how they *actually sound...I think that even for 500 bucks...a vintage nad receiver & cd player plus a new pair of those epos ELS3 speakers that everybody is talking about would be a much better choice...hell...I stayed up all night researching systems for my neighbor so he wouldn't throuw his money away on this thing.

I have a GREAT suggestions...why dont one of the super rich uber audiophiles on this site buy one and then see what it's all about...after all...it is less than some of you guys spend on cables...and think about it...you guys can be pioneers...I just cant afford to be that pioneer when I have to save my pennies for real gear.(shakes jar of change)

just my 2c

Ellery
Hi Slappy,

Yes, I read about this a while ago. At first, I think we will all get a small chuckle out of it. Actually, the fact that soaking a wooden cone in sake makes the cone perform differently than a non-soaked cone shows the insidious nature of vibration and how it can affect an audio and video system. Almost ANYTHING we do in the realm of vibration control makes a difference. The question is whether that difference brings us closer to faithfully reproducing what has been captured in the recording or takes us further away from that goal.

I am not a proponent of cones (they do not isolate a component from vibration and because they are a rigid device, they transmit vibration up through the rack and shelf into the component. They also do nothing to address air-borne and internally generated vibration). But the fact that a company like JVC is actually using a "tweak" kind of item in one of their designs is heartening.

Best Regards,

Barry Kohan

Disclaimer: I am a manufacturer of vibration control products.
Hi All,

Ooops. Please disregard that last post by me. I had read about the sake soaked speaker cones, but when I saw Slappy's post I temporarily went brain dead and forgot that the article was about speaker cones and not cones that go under equipment!

I do think my comments about vibration control are valid, however.

Best,

Barry
I second Ellery's suggesion. Some rich guy oughtta buy it and give us his opinion of it. :)