Plus! I wish all speakers sounded focused and transparent like LS3/5a’s or vintage Quads. I also want them to be uncompressed and play large, with window-shattering power and floor-shaking bass. And while I’m wishing . . . I’ll take a little glow and sparkle and voodoo magic as well.
Unfortunately, few loudspeakers do all that. And the ones that can cost crazy cash.
But there might be hope. I have discovered a radically engineered floor-standing speaker that maybe, just maybe, does a lot of all that—for a lot less than crazy cash. That speaker is the Manger p1, manufactured in Mellrichstadt, Germany. It costs $14,995/pair to $18,995/pair, depending on the finish.
The Manger sound transducer
1925: General Electric engineers Chester Rice and Edward Kellogg introduced their radical “Hornless Loudspeakers,” which featured a conical paper diaphragm attached to a coil of wire energized by a large magnet structure.
1968: Vexed by what he perceived as the inherent limitations of loudspeaker cones, Manger Audio’s founder, Josef Manager (1929-2016), began developing a new coneless type of loudspeaker driver. His first finished design—a flat, low mass, wide-bandwidth, multilayered, impregnated-textile disc—appeared in 1974. Manger described this membranelike disc as “highly elastic in its plane but inelastic in bending.”1 Unlike most loudspeaker drivers, the diaphragm of the Manger Sound Transducer (MST) does not operate historically. Instead, voice coil excitations generate transverse waves along its flat surface, like ripples in a pond.
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