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Audio and Video Talk
The Vintage Audio Section
Are Vintage Speakers Like Vintage Tyres?
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<blockquote data-quote="MSAllen" data-source="post: 1117826" data-attributes="member: 18673"><p>No mention of Quad ESL 63 or the original Quad ESL in this thread? They are not always easy to fix but the electrostatic drive principle and the point source design of the 63 that Peter Walker came up with were simply timeless.</p><p>There has not been significant improvement in electrostatic sound to this day, unless you get into seriously esoteric speakers like the Soundlab A1 or M1s.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MSAllen, post: 1117826, member: 18673"] No mention of Quad ESL 63 or the original Quad ESL in this thread? They are not always easy to fix but the electrostatic drive principle and the point source design of the 63 that Peter Walker came up with were simply timeless. There has not been significant improvement in electrostatic sound to this day, unless you get into seriously esoteric speakers like the Soundlab A1 or M1s. [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
The Vintage Audio Section
Are Vintage Speakers Like Vintage Tyres?
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