I don’t like it either, the spinning gold bits would induce migraineOK, I'll put my neck on the chopping block... I have never gotten on with the Gyrodec, looks-wise, even though for some it's the pinnacle of audio design:
Pfft! Amateur hour!
Feast your eyes...
A snip at only $650000.
Let's rest our eyes for a minute
These B&O speakers looks like someone has bought a flat pac coffee table from IKEA and somehow managed to assemble it a bit wrong.
Then I wonder if it's advertised as 'wireless'?
I'm a great fan of form following function.
But I have yet to figure out why the input and speaker terminals are located in the front of the amp, rather than the back.
Not ugly at all in my estimation. Just purposeful.
I'm a great fan of form following function.
But I have yet to figure out why the input and speaker terminals are located in the front of the amp, rather than the back.
Not ugly at all in my estimation. Just purposeful.
I don’t like it either, the spinning gold bits would induce migraine
I’m not allowed to use my Gyro SE when Mrs. B is in the room as the rotating weights give her motion sickness!
I'm sure some people like it, but I have always thought D'Agastino to be up there in the fugly stakes:
Well then it wouldn’t get my wife’s acceptance factor (WAF) for either the bathroom or living room !Bathroom scales?
To the extent that there is zero bling with the M-22, I'd say its form follows function more so than many other amplifiers. However, it does have a rather clever design, which is to locate the four 33,000uF storage caps outside, and well away from the heat of always-on transistors.Not sure the form follows the function, more the parts it’s made from, a potato peelers form follows it’s function but I don’t think an amplifier does.
I don’t like it either, the spinning gold bits would induce migraine