Andrew Jones - New Company, New Speaker - Field Coil Concentric


It appears Andrew Jones has started his own company, "Jones & Cerreta" and will be showcasing a new speaker with a field coil concentric driver at Axpona.

Jones and Ceretta

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GNyx1cPoU2o

I am excited to audit this speaker and talk to him at Axpona in a couple of weeks.

deep_333

@deep_333 wrote:

If the price looks relatively affordable on his drivers,  average audiophiles may come to their senses on how insanely bloated the price of field coil drivers have been with some players out there (vulture price)..A field coil driver is not some magic ball driver... permanent magnet vs electromagnet essentially.

+1

These look very interesting. Not completely unlike the Genelec 8380A's (though with a permanent magnet coaxial driver) that I heard a few weeks ago - they really got my attention. 

I am absolutely looking forward to hearing them. A legend in speaker design development. 

While I am interested in hear his new speakers, I really wonder why AJ would choose to use 1920’s tech in a 2020’s speaker and don’t field coil speakers have to be plugged into the wall?

@curiousjim wrote:

[...] I really wonder why AJ would choose to use 1920’s tech in a 2020’s speaker and don’t field coil speakers have to be plugged into the wall?

Because electromagnets make speakers sound better, and yes they require a DC power supply. 

Old tech can be great tech that surpasses modern tech. The former was about what it required, no holds barred, while the latter is usually about working around imposed obstacles such as economy, weight, size, convenience and aesthetics/appeal - all part of an overall business model.

Old tech also had limitations to work around, but while modern tech has evolved it’s still, typically, implemented in the context of physical and monetary limitations. Moreover there’s something to be said of the design prowess and innovation of yore, which conversely I find is suspiciously conservative in current times.

Basically most speakers made today are from designs that saw the light of day decades ago, even millenia, while those that are impractical are omitted - per the above; we shouldn't mistake older design paths that are no longer around as being left behind because they didn't sound great, but rather because they don't fit the modern "narrative."