Designer Hall of Fame


There are many great designers out there, and especially in the lore from the golden age, but I'm not to familiar with them. I thought it might be interesting to discuss some of the great designers for engineering skill and knowledge, business integrity, and ultimatley quality of their products. My short list a "hall of fame" if you will of designers working today are:

Nelson Pass, Pass Labs
Charles Hansen, Ayre
Roger Modjeski, Music Reference
Ken Stevens, Convergent Audio Technolgy (CAT)
Kevin Hayes, VAC

and how could I leave Jeff Rowland off? Well it is a short list. Who would you nominate?
pubul57

Showing 4 responses by audiozen

Additional info on Edgar Villchur mentioned in this thread who invented the worlds first moving piston acoustic suspension speaker in 1952 which allowed lower bass frequencies down to 35hz. His patents were issued up through 1957 but in 1958, his patents were challenged by an electronics company in Federal Court since one of the
parts in the acoustic suspension speaker belonged to this company and was not designed or manufactured by Acoustic Research. Vilchur's patents were denied. He got burned. He got so depressed that he left the speaker business and made a fortune designing and manufacturing hearing aids. His three remaining partner's in Acoustic Research, Kloss, Lowe, and Hoffman, took the first initial of their last names and founded K.L.H.
PHASE TECHNOLOGY COMPANY in Florida..another game changer.. they never get credit or acknowledged for inventing the worlds first ferrous oxide fluid filled tweeter in the late 1970's. The tweeter took speakers to a higher lever and vastly improved high frequency performance.
John Atkinson..give me a break. He became the very creature
that J. Gordon Holt detested. Around 1961 J. Gordon worked for High Fidelity magazine and was instructed to favor and write false reviews praising audio products from companies that had the largest annual advertising contracts in the magazine. Out of protest, he quit High Fidelity and founded Stereophile in 1962. During the 1990's, Vandersteen Speakers had the largest annual advertising contract in Stereophile with full size ads taking up the entire back cover every month. Yet during that time period Vandersteen speakers were absolute junk with cheap $ 26.00 tweeters cheap midrange and woofer drivers, cheap internal wire and cheap crossover networks. The speakers had loose bass, muddy midrange and would stress when pushed too hard. Vandersteens are better today but back in the 90's they were junk speakers geared towards budding audiophiles. John Atkinson wrote great reviews on their models and always listed them in recommended components. He portrayed a false image of Vandersteen to the public to maintain his large annual ad contract with Richard Vandersteen. Give Atkinson a big check and a large annual ad contract and more than likely your tin can with copper wire will make it to the "A" recommended components list in Stereophile as one of the best speakers of the year.
Leopold Stowkowski..In 1934, Stokowski was conductor of the
Philadelphia Orchestra, he was pissed off at the poor playback quality of 78 rpm records of the Orchestra recorded by CBS/Columbia Records. He went to Columbia records in New York in 1934 and demanded better quality recordings. His complaining and protesting resulted in Columbia Records inventing that year two channel stereo which did not become fully utillized until the late 1950's by RCA even though Columbia invented and produced the first 33-1/3 rpm vinyl record in 1948.