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The Best Show Reporting
Coverage of CES 2000 from Las Vegas, NV --
Jan. 6-9, 2000
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| SoundStage!
LIVE Press Event - Thiel |
Kentucky's Thiel Audio announced a number of
new products at a press breakfast held on January 7th. Among them are the PCS
"personal" speaker, which we reported on earlier in AudioVideoNews,
the PowerPoint on-wall speaker (first shown in SoundStage! LIVE's CEDIA '99
coverage), and PowerPlane in-wall speaker.
Perhaps the biggest news was the introduction of Thiel's first subwoofer,
which will be available in March or April of this year. This new powered subwoofer will
feature a 350W switching power amplifier and two 10" high-output drivers. Unlike
traditional subwoofers, the Thiel unit will have only a power switch and line-level
inputs; all controls will be placed on a separate electronic control unit, one of which
can manipulate any number of subwoofers, allowing multiple units to be used in rooms of
varying sizes without sacrificing ease of setup and configuration.
Thiel's subwoofer control system (shown
left, $1500) is designed to minimize the traditional difficulties of integrating
subwoofers into a speaker system. The control panel allows users to input their main
speakers' type (sealed or reflex), low-frequency limit, sensitivity, and damping factor,
as well as indicating where the subwoofers are placed, and the Thiel system automatically
configures the subwoofer system for highest-quality sound integration with the consumer's
main speakers. The control unit also allows consumers to use the subs in mono or stereo
mode, select how many subwoofers are in use per channel, and configure the lowest
frequency (down to 20Hz) and output level.
Each subwoofer system will require one control unit and one or
more subwoofer units ($2500 each). The subwoofer cases are specially designed to function
as speaker-stands for Thiel monitor speakers, making them even easier to integrate.
Jim Thiel also discussed his PCS coaxial midrange/tweeter driver, which
combines both a tweeter dome and a midrange cone with a mechanical crossover in one
driver. This system allows for maximum time and phase coherency in a small-cabinet
loudspeaker, and is used in the PCS, the PowerPoint, and the PowerPlane.
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