Well obviously cannot see the picture, but was impressed with the old
Toshibas, though they were not self powered, standard 8 ohm units. Quite
heavy, either mounted on ceiling posts or floor standing monopoles a bit
like stand fans.
As I say, they did need bass enhancement to really sound rich.
I was a little worried about their longevity though as the cones and
suspension looked like some kind of plastic foam.
They were described as long throw, which for some reason I though amusing
considering the fact that it needed two people to move one.
Brian
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This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...
Blind user, so no pictures please!
"Phil Allison" wrote in message
...
Brian Gaff wrote:
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Many years ago Toshiba had some globe speakers that sounded quite good.
Basically they had multiple drive units moundted in a shape a bit like a
dodecahedron and covered over with a global mesh. The main construction
was
di cast aluminium. You needed a bass bin as I recall, but they sounded
quite
good. I wondered if anyone had continued with this type of idea since it
kind of turned the traditional directional stereo speaker idea upside down
so to speak.
** This pic shows the forerunner to the Bose 901 - the Bose 2201.
http://www.davidsgallery.info/DaveTu...odel_2201.html
The enclosure was shaped like one eighth of a sphere, with 22 x 5 inch
drivers mounted on what looks like a curved aluminium baffle. Max height is
25 inches, making the internal volume about 3 cu.ft or 80 litres, plus each
2201 was self powered (50W amplifier) and equalised.
Owners could place one box in each corner of a room, next to the floor or
ceiling. Other arrangements were possible too, if cost were no object.
FYI: 22 x 5 inch drivers have a cone area equal to 2 x 15 inch woofers.
Not surprisingly, the 2201 was a poor seller and Dr Bose was persuaded by
sales folk to build the 901 instead, as a far cheaper, user friendly
alternative.
.... Phil