Audiophile Speakers with 25 yr + Longevity


Curious as to what a list of these loudspeakers which "probably won't require maintenance until your kindergartner has earned their doctoral degree" might look like...
lg1

Showing 1 response by mapman

I had Ohm Walsh 2s from 1982-2008 that were still going strong when I traded them in for newer models.

The OHM Walshes are most resilient. There are no exposed working parts. USe of wide range walsh drivers with very high crossover to a tweeter at 7khz or so makes then very hard to overdrive or stress. Plus, I received 100% of the original value of the speakers towards the trade-in using OHMs very favorable trade-in policy.

OHM has been around for about 40 years or so now and may be the only speaker company that still fully supports every speaker model they have ever made, offering repairs, upgrades and trade-ins wherever possible..