Can Magnepan survive Wendell Diller?


I bought my first set of Magnepans in 1976, and I currently have a pair of 1.7i's.

It is difficult for me to upgrade to the 3.7i's because their are so many things that the company can do to improve their product that they simply won't offer; upgraded crossover components, a solid wood/rigid frames and better stands are examples.

Other companies are now doing this, but Magnepan always says Wendell doesn't think that is a good idea.

Can a man who suggests using lamp cord for his speaker line really have that much control over an otherwise unique technological approach to speaker design? I must be missing something obvious when a product is hand assembled in MN and any of these upgrades would, in my mind, warrant factory upgrades. Who wouldn't spend an extra $1k for a 1.7i with a hardwood frame and an upgraded x-over? Adding a ribbon tweeter to the 1.7i would warrant an additional $1k, still bringing them in $2k under the 3.7i.

Is it common for one person to hold an entire company back in high end audio? 
128x128william53b

Absolutely stupid, smaller businesses fail more often.
 

And sorry, but I used to make a living as a consultant in product design and development until I retired, so I have no insight into this subject at all.

 

It’s irrelevant to the intent of this thread as posted.

Magnepan doesn’t need to be cheap, they need to innovate.

That people have wandered off the reservation is not my fault.

I asked Audiogon to remove this thread quite a while ago, but it's still here. Why do they remove other less contentious posts and leave this up?

I do not know.