Would any other speaker survive this?!

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Aug 10, 2019
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Listening to Burial at near max volume last night. The bass "danced" the speaker off the shelf - it dropped about 7ft onto the ground making a hole in the carpet.

Put the cover back on and the cable back in and apart from some marking, it worked fine!

25ish year old Bose 301 - they don't make em like that any more!!
 
They certainly don't - they'd probaly design them better so that they wouldn't vibrate enough to move in the first place ;-)
 
Bass IS movement (of air at low frequencies) . So how do these magic speakers work then?!

It's the speaker shelf's fault anyway.
 
yes. my cousin dropped a fairly ancient epos speaker (esl3?) down uncarpeted stairs, it put a dent in the cabinet but otherwise sounds the same (rubbish).
 
I thought speakers were designed to have a good sound, not to survive a plane crash.
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The 301 are not well built; a potato chip package has more weight than a 301.
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I think he referred to them being the 25 year old 301's (Series II or earlier) which from the pics look more sturdy than the current series V.

I could be wrong never having owned a pair.

The only Bose equipment I have heard were an array of professional Bose speakers* at a small John Martyn gig in a hotel in Southsea back in (about) 1980-81. They sounded superb but I was very into John Martyn back then and it was a small venue and I was little awed at at being within a few metres of the man.

"Johnny too bad" never sounded better!

*Probably 802's
 
john martin! Zzolid air, great saw him in telford about about 10 years ago one of the best gigs ive been to
 
These speakers survived another drop about 20 years ago too. Small dent on one corner.

I've seen new 301s - they weigh about half as much and look much much weedier.

Anyway, I'm impressed - thought it was new speaker time!
 
AFAIK a truly good speaker will transmit little if any vibration through its cabinet... any energy a speaker creates should result in the movement of the drivers back and forth - not the cabinet!
that said, any speaker that can survive a 7ft drop must have something going for it...gravity?
 
Just had to screw the bass cone back in (only noticed it when I cranked it up, slight rattling) - and left the covers off. Something rather thrilling about watching real thumping bass moving a decent bass cone. Or is it me being sad?!
 
not sad - cone movement is a rather neat thing to see. the feel of the air pushed through the tuning ports is also rather nifty.
 

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