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
Mick Malone from Supratek, although now retired, for the way he worked like an artisan with innovative designs and honest prices. Around its great products many people get knowledge and friendship. The prove is the largest forum here at Audiogon: "The Preamp Deal of the Century" with near 3,500 entries.
Yves Bernard Andre of YBA, formerly of Goldmund, he is the "blue light inside CDP" man
http://loa.ensta.fr/ilm/staff/groupe.en.html
Albert Von Schweikert, because his speakers are among the best in the world and for his innovative concepts like the Acoustic Inverse Replication (A.I.R.) technology that replicate the inverse of the recording microphone signal. Some of his speakers are like musical instruments that one can tune up to the maximum.
Some of the names on this list are absurd. I would think that anyone in the "Designer Hall of Fame" would not include anyone who calls me for advice.

I don't belong in it (even though my peers credit me for one or two notable contributions), so a good handful of the names listed don't belong there either.

I don't think that anyone mentioned Dick Sequerra. A sharp guy, who knows more than I do. He qualifies.
I met John Dunlavy on a few occasions, and did a brief 2 day tour of his factory in Colorado, before he sold the company back when. I also used to sell Dunlavy's, and was impressed with the many things his speaker designs DID RIGHT!
It was a pleasure and an honor both meeting John and representing his otherwise excellent products, and I'm very glad for both of those opportunities. He surely was a nice man, and a very keen designer.
While I didn't necessarily agree with "all" of John's Philosophies on speaker design, as well as his theories, necessarily, on issues relating to audio system performance as a whole (lol- indeed all the audio engineers I've met over the years believe in their way ONLY, when it comes to designs and theories - lol), one thing is for sure, he knew his stuff and provided many an audiophile (including myself) with superb products, and his unique offerings were not duplicated by many, if any.
Actually, from what I did know of John's philosophies on things such as amplifier design technology, interconnect/speaker wire effectiveness and relevance - and, of course, phase correct first order, time aligned array speaker designs - he may not have know much towards audio system tweaking, system matching, and general audiophile preachings, but at least his speakers were otherwise dynamic, coherent, FAST, and focused, and did many things very right. In fact, they made superb HT/music speakers, and could be made to both disappear and also accurately represent the audio signal, when matched properly with good equipment, a good acoustic space, and care.
As I have both owned and admired equipment from such Legends as Nelson Pass, Jim Thiel, Bobby P, Dan DAgostino, Paul Klipsch, and others, I will always have a place in my heart for John, for extending his time and opening his facilities to me, to share with me his day to day busines operation, talk theories on audio design philosophies, engineering, and acoustics, etc, and for just being a great guy! (fascinating seeing all the engineering projects he's been involved with over the past century+, even with the Gov't).
Anyway, just wanted to take a moment to share my appreciation for having met John Dunlavy, and for also being a part of this great hobby we all get to enjoy. Yes, RIP John. We'll see you in Heaven indeed my friend...