blazeaglory
Active Member
Will Infinity ever come out with an new model Kappa series tower? Does Infinity even make hifi speakers anymore? I know they make good speakers but it seems they lost something since the days of the huge towers?
You can add Revel speakers to that list.I doubt that you will ever see anything like the "golden age of Infinity" ever again. With the departure of Arnie Nudell and the sell-out to Harman International, they are relegated to the big box store market. They are working at rapidly destroying (if they already haven't), the JBL and Mark Levinson brands as well.
Audiophiles are a dying breed.I wonder why?
I can guarantee that if Infinity put out a similar line for hi end audio, it would sell out. Dont they realize that the wage gap has increased towards the rich? haha
Either way, I want to see some new ultra hi end Infinity's (add JBL and the others to that list as well)
I can guarantee that if Infinity put out a similar line for hi end audio, it would sell out.
Audiophiles are a dying breed.
Infinity has been owned by Harman since 1983 and the end of high end didn't come until the late 1990s. The departure of Arnie (1990 or 1991) might be more closely related, but I suspect there's not just one cause that can be pointed at as the reason for their downward quality trend. It might be indirectly related to the Harman takeover; as Harman increased their portfolio of subsidiaries they probably realized that having multiple brands competing against each other in the same space didn't make sense (although I didn't see any brand in their current holdings that competes directly with Infinity's classic line), or it may be just, as another poster mentioned, that audiophiles are a dying breed and that there wasn't enough profit to justify the expensive development and manufacture of high-end models.I doubt that you will ever see anything like the "golden age of Infinity" ever again. With the departure of Arnie Nudell and the sell-out to Harman International, they are relegated to the big box store market. They are working at rapidly destroying (if they already haven't), the JBL and Mark Levinson brands as well.
Not so sure. There are some VERY nice speakers being made in a price range where the sky is the limit. Wide range of prices on very nice new gear as well. Emotiva comes to mind as high end gear for the masses. (very nice stuff btw)
Someone must be buying it or there would be no market for it. Prices for used gear has gone way up in the last 10 years or so. Good stuff on CL is gone in mear minutes. Plenty of philes out there...
I like Infinity and all, but I doubt that.
Infinity has been owned by Harman since 1983 and the end of high end didn't come until the late 1990s. The departure of Arnie (1990 or 1991) might be more closely related, but I suspect there's not just one cause that can be pointed at as the reason for their downward quality trend. It might be indirectly related to the Harman takeover; as Harman increased their portfolio of subsidiaries they probably realized that having multiple brands competing against each other in the same space didn't make sense (although I didn't see any brand in their current holdings that competes directly with Infinity's classic line), or it may be just, as another poster mentioned, that audiophiles are a dying breed and that there wasn't enough profit to justify the expensive development and manufacture of high-end models.
Also, in regards to the "polydome", how good of a mid range (or speaker in general) is it?
Is it a good design for sound and just expensive to make? Why dont we see more of them in speaker systems today?
It was a good design, Genesis loudspeakers used it in a few different speaker models when Arnie Nudel was with them, the dome was made of titanium, they even used a similar version of the emit-r, here are some pics.
I think #3 is Genesis VI