There's a major shift of production from China to the U.S., which includes some truly affordable electronics and speakers.
I've interviewed Bob Carver a number of times -- he designed the world's first high-power, 350-watt-per-channel solid state amps in the early 1970s, the first high-power compact amps, then the first high-power compact subwoofers. But over the last few years Carver returned to designing tube electronics. The company designs and builds audiophile products the old fashioned way, by hand, with point-to-point wiring (no printed circuit boards), or surface mount components. Carver prices start at $1,690 for the Black Magic 20 tube amplifier, but it was $2,500 before the Jade Design acquisition. All Bob Carver amps enjoy similar price reductions.
Jade Design moved Carver's production facilities from Kentucky to Nashville, Tenn. Jade also owns Emotiva, which manufactures some of my favorite electronics and powered speakers in China, so the biggest surprise of the press event was that Laufman will soon start building some Emotiva products in Tennessee. The factory will be open to the public (but please call ahead), so you can see for yourself that audio production is returning to the U.S. Carver electronics will be sold direct from the company's Web site and brick-and-mortar U.S. retailers, and distributed globally. Emotiva is sold direct on the company's Web site, prices start at $219 for the Mini-X A100integrated amplifier, which is now on sale for $189.
Laufman was clear on this: he will start to move Emotiva production, for selected models, to the States. He's not going to just stuff an outsourced circuit board into a chassis and proclaim the product is made in the U.S.; no, Emotiva and Carver designs use major components sourced from U.S. suppliers. Laufman also promised a range of Emotiva and Carver digital converters that will be made domestically.
I have fond memories of listening to Bob Carver's flat-panel ribbon speakers from the 1990s, and those speakers are being redesigned and will be back in production.
I will be reviewing Carver's Black Magic 20 tube amp in the near future, and I just received word that I'll be getting the $179, made-in-the-U.S. Orbit turntable soon.
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