Dynaudio - Made in China vs Denmark


Hi,

    I  recently Purchased a new pair of Dynaudios. The floor model I auditioned were 'Made in Denmark' but the pair which was shipped out by the dealer was 'Made in China'. They are still boxed. Whats should I do:

1. Swap with the showroom floor model (they were probably a yr or 2 old)

2. Unbox and use my 'Made in china' pair ?

My main concern here is the quality of the product from China. Resale values.

Anyone with experience please chime in. 

 

ryanhere

Is it fair to automatically assume everything made in China is sub par quality?

IMO, no. Seems to me, China today is roughly where Japan was in the 60s and early 70s. "Made in Japan" rather quickly went from meaning "cheap junk" (plastic toys and flip flops) to being a standard of excellence in engineering and manufacturing. Likewise, China is producing much more than cheap T shirts and sneakers these days. Some Chinese HiFi products (especially streamers and DACs) are about as good as (or better than) anything on the market, unless you get into ultra high end stuff. Have a look at Lumin products for example. Actually, Lumin is veering into ultra high end (depending on we define that).

I don't know about Made in China loudspeakers, but wouldn't automatically assume they're inferior. Just try to verify there is decent after-sale service/support for wherever you live,  Loudspeakers are challenging just by virtue of size/weight compared to rack components.

Gotta love the sane, reasoned arguments posted here with the occasional xenophobic responses peppered in for good measure, as if they just skimmed past what makes sense so their heads wouldn't explode.

All the best,
Nonoise

To Bill K.  Commended for what everyone and there mother knows that audio from china is 9 times out of ten a inferior less quality product those people take no pride in what they make  it’s always been that way.  Tahquitz

I recommend not buying "floor models", especially with speakers, as they typically have had a "hard life" and a lot of hours on them for their age.

For the last 20+ years, components for all sorts of products have been "globally sourced", so it's likely that the "Made in Denmark" label refers to where the final assembly took place.

Having said all of that, do what makes you happiest!

Personally, I'd return them. I recently bought the Evoke 20 speakers and mine are manufactured in Denmark. I refuse to pay the inflated prices that companies are charging for product coming out of China (whenever I can). I specifically searched for non-China speakers.