Michael Strickland wrote on Wed, 03 February 2010 18:58 |
I was just going to make a post asking why I don't see these BMS drivers around. Looks like they're finally getting some attention. On paper, these things look like beasts! High power, high efficiency, low weight, complete phase coherency...
What's the pricing on the 15" Triaxial? Do they sound as good and get as loud as they spec out?
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Hello Michael
Cost on that is $950.00.
I have not used this unit. I do use the mid high unit extensively, and have just started to use the coaxial 12".
And I sell it too, so my (very high) opinions are open to interpretation/scrutiny.
On to BMS/Attention.
I started a long (not for me) reply to this part, but it seemed pointless. Short answer (for me), they are doing good. Both in the US, and more so abroad. Even last year my BMS sales were up. The one exception is this very (LAB readers/individual providers) market. Which used to be a surprise to me, as I thought this would be my big in when I started in sales. If you want more explanation, ask.
At times I feel that this board can run a bit heavily populated, eastern USA seaboard centric. One of my favorite TV shows a couple of years ago was the ill fated Studio 60. In one episode a cast member is being detained in a rural Nevada jail. The supposed rube sheriff is played by John Goodman. He has a line to the show producer how, "You TV types think that nothing exists between Madison Avenue and Hollywood Blvd." And that rang heavily to me. Both from an entertainment standpoint; the X-Files was the one show where they were constantly going to rural areas, and the residents were always typical TV hicks. And from a business standpoint. It's not that I don't ship to LA and NYC, but from a population density standpoint the numbers are low.
But home hifi, home entertainment, speaker company, paging, movie editing, noise testing, even car and boat systems, etc. markets keep moving forward.
Regards, Jack Arnott