Site Links

Glass Ear Bookmark and Share Posted Mon Oct 26, 2009, 4:13 PM ET

The materials used to make speaker diaphragms are well established—polypropylene, paper, Kevlar, aluminum, titanium, beryllium, silk, and even diamond, to name a few. So I was surprised to find a speaker system with diaphragms made of glass. Developed over nearly four years by a Japanese glass company called Hario (Japanese for "king of glass"), the Harion system is certainly intriguing, though the English-language website linked here has nothing about it, and the company did not supply much info, even after repeated requests.

The 2-channel system consists of a downfiring subwoofer pictured here, two midrange modules that fire upward into a 360-degree reflector, and two direct-radiating tweeters, all of which are separate modules. The sub and midrange diaphragms are fashioned from heat-resistant, borosilicate glass a mere 0.8mm thick, while the tweeters are actually made from acrylic. I received no answer to my question about why acrylic was used in the tweeter, but I suspect it could be because glass might shatter at high frequencies.

How much does the Harion system cost? The company hasn't answered that question yet. Hario does say it spent 16 million yen ($174,000 as of this writing) to hand-build one set, so if it ever becomes a commercial product, it won't be cheap.

How does it sound? I have no idea, but I'm skeptical, especially since the company's main business seems to be making glass teapots and other housewares. Hario claims that glass is highly moisture resistant and very stiff, allowing it to produce "powerful low-range sounds." I'm not at all sure about that, but the proof is in the hearing, and so far, the Harion has only been demonstrated in Japan as far as I know. I'm not saying this idea will result in sublime sound, but it sure is interesting nonetheless.

Bookmark and Share

Previous Post | Blog Home | Next Post >

Reader Comments 

Posted Tue Oct27, 2009, 12:38 PM — By Joe G.

Perfect 8 Technologies manufactures a glass speaker, the Force, that highly regarded. They use glass because of how high the resonate frequencies are. These things look like they'll crack if you sneeze near them. Check out www/perfect8.com

Posted Tue Oct27, 2009, 2:20 PM — By Scott Wilkinson

Great tip, Joe, thanks! I'll check it out right away.

Posted Tue Oct27, 2009, 4:05 PM — By Scott Wilkinson

Now that I've looked at the Perfect8 site, it seems clear that their speakers use drivers made of relatively conventional materials, not glass as in the Harion. However, their enclosures are made of glass, and the look wicked cool! They've also gotten some raves from various audiophile outlets, so I'll definitely profile them here. Thanks again for the tip, Joe!

Posted Fri Nov 6, 2009, 9:38 PM — By junxiao

I'm very happy about look this!everthing is very well!I like this picture.Look,how beautiful it is!

Add Comment

Name (Required):

Email (Required, will not be shown to public):

Comment (Required, max chars: 1024):

You have characters left.

Type the characters you see in this picture

  

Sponsored Technology Center

Stereophile    ::     Home Theater    ::     Ultimate AV    ::     Home Theater Design    ::     Shutterbug
Home/News • Print & Web Media Kit • Privacy • Terms of Use • Contact UAV
RSS News & Reviews • RSS Blogs

Copyright © SOURCE INTERLINK MEDIA All rights reserved.