Wharfedale is the name of a prominent audio equipment manufacturer from the UK, famous for its loudspeakers. It is currently part of the International Audio Group.
History
Wharfedale Wireless Works was founded in
1932 by
Gilbert Briggs, and became one of Britain's leading manufacturers of
audiophile equipment, particularly loudspeakers. In addition to winning awards by groups such as the
Bradford Radio Society, mass public testing at
Carnegie Hall proved Wharfedale speakers indistinguishable from live music. Innovations introduced by Wharfedale under Briggs included such basics as the
two-way loudspeaker and the
ceramic magnet.
In the
1950s and
1960s, Wharfedale became famous for its technique of eliminating cabinet
resonances by using a double cabinet, with the space between the inner and outer shells filled with
sand. Purchasers of the loudspeaker systems would receive the appropriate quantity of sand which had been shipped from Wharfedale in England.
* (
Wharfedale in
Yorkshire is the site of numerous sand quarries). Briggs sold the company in
1958, and it has been through several owners since then.
External links
Loudspeaker manufacturers