NEWS CATEGORIES:



NEWS ARCHIVE >>
SOFTPEDIA REVIEWS >>
MEET THE EDITORS >>
Home / News / Technology / Audio

Audio


Breaking News: Thor Is Actually the God of Earthquakes!

One of the strongest, loudest, lowest and "in-wallest" in-wall subwoofers of the planet

By Florin Tibu, Audio Editor

6th of July 2007, 18:31 GMT

Adjust text size:


121dB for bass ain't a toy; be carefull or yourt plaster will fall off.
Enlarge picture
The problem emerged ever since people started to think to bring serious sound in their homes: of course, it was very neat and cool to watch movies in the comforting intimacy of your home while enjoying the true sound of a cinema, with blasting effects and rumbling explosions, all entrancing you and offering such an intense experience... yeap, neat
indeed!

But some people aren't at all fond of crowing and piling up large loudspeaker boxes in their living rooms: they of course still liked the great sound of serious audio equipment but especially in smaller-sized rooms installing huge blasters was a dead end.
Companies like Earthquake Sound have thought about such a thing and even more, found a solution. As far as the bass is concerned, Earthquake Sound proudly presents Thor, the world's most capable and at the same time slim and serious in-wall subwoofer. Thor is something you've never seen before: it looks like your common in-wall bass machine but the performance specs are truly searing.

There you go, Thor: the world's neatest in-wall subwoofer.
Enlarge picture
First of all, Earthquake Sound promises you hassle-free installation in fresh buildings or retro-fitting it. No more calling for engineers and having your rooms all messed up: Thor is easy to install for everybody due to its special mounting system and unless you're a complete moronic idiot nincompoop, you'll be ready in no time.

Thanks to Thor's advanced technologies, the shallow woofer will now produce indeed more bass and less futile resonance: it packs a driver woofer and a passive radiator for an even stronger sound. This in-wall woofer can get particularly loud as its dual 10" cones' Sound Pressure Level can reach up to 121dB... and this means loud!

Finally, it can blast up to a wall-wrecking 600W power and the frequency range goes from an insane 18Hz bottom end to a neat 160Hz. And no, THAT Thor is still the lightning-guy...

We are just a few, but there are many of you, Softpedia users, out there. That's why we thought it would be a good idea to create an email address for you to help us a little in finding gadgets we missed. Interesting links are bound to be posted with recognition going mainly to those who submit. The address is .

TAGS:

bass | subwoofer | earthquake sound | in-wall subwoofers | in-wall sound
Read by 1,292 user(s) | Add comment | Link to this article TWEET THIS


Article rating:
Fair (2.8/5) 6 vote(s)    

Subscribe to news | Print article | Send to friend

© Copyright 2001-2009 Softpedia
Contact:

 

 

SEARCH THE NEWS ARCHIVE :




Today's News
| Yesterday's News | News Archive


MORE RELATED ARTICLES:


My Personal Earthquake

$30,000 Home Audio

Chicks Dig Bass: The Tunnel of (Lovely) Bass

Elan's TheaterPoint Speaker Family Has New Members

Robotic Speakers: SpeakerCraft Time One and Three

Orange County Choppers' Audio

User opinions:

No user comments yet.
Be the first to express your opinion using the form below!

Share your opinion:

Your Name:
Your Email Address:
(will not be used for commercial purposes)
Solve this to prove you're not a bot: =
Your review/opinion:

 




Windows tabGames tabDrivers tabMac tabLinux tabScripts tabMobile tabHandheld tabGadgets tabNews tab

SUBMIT PROGRAM   |   ADVERTISE   |   GET HELP   |   SEND US FEEDBACK   |   RSS FEEDS   |   ENTER NEWS SITE   |   ENGLISH BOARD   |   ROMANIAN FORUM