What are your thoughts on the "Edsels" of the audio history?


It is a human normal to seek the best, and the world of the high end audio fan is full of that history.  But what about some of the dead-ends/failures?

How about Quadraphonic, Perfect Sound Forever, 8-track tapes, SQ and others in your thoughts/memory? 





whatjd
Electrovoice speakers.....when I heard them they sounded good (12trx in homebuilt cabinet)
@ericsch wow did your post mentioning soundcraftman EQ bring back memories. I used to sell them and also sold these 2-300 watt per channel soundcraftman amps and Sold them with Cerwin Vegas with 15 inch woofers.  Led Zepplin, Molly Hatchet,  AC-DC, never sounded better. HA!
Anyone remember this bomb?

ELCASET was an analog cassette tape based audio format developed by SONY in cooperation with Matsushita (Panasonic) and TEAC in 1976. It was intended to offer a reel-to-reel system sound quality in a convenient cartridge format. The name comes from the expression "large cassette" or "L-cassette". Although the ELCASET used a 6 mm (0.25 in) wide tape running at 9.5 cm/s (3.75 ips), twice the width and twice the speed of a PHILIPS Compact Cassette it became a complete failure in the marketplace and by 1978 it completely faded-out from the market. This happened mainly because Compact Cassette had a more compact format and the dramatical improvement with the introduction of new tape formulations such as chromium dioxide and lower noise with the introduction of the Dolby B noise reduction circuit.
The Hill Plasmatronic Loudspeakers. I helped set up a pair. My first inclination was, you'd have to be out of your mind!