
History of hi-fi development
The 1920s saw the introduction of electronic amplification, microphones, and the application of quantitative engineering principles to the reproduction of sound. Much of the pioneering work was done at Bell Laboratories and commercialized by Western Electric. Acoustically-recorded disc records with capriciously peaky frequency response were replaced with electrically recorded records.
Meanwhile, the rise of radio meant increased popularity for loudspeakers and tube amplifiers, so there was an anomaly of a period of time during which radio receivers commonly used loudspeakers and electronic amplifiers to produce sound, while phonographs were still commonly purely mechanical and acoustic. Later, electronic phonographs became available, as stand-alone units or designed to play through consumer's radios.
The development of Sound film in the 1930s led motion picture companies to develop amplification and loudspeaker systems to fill movie theaters with good quality sound at a reasonable volume. To achieve this result, they employed loudspeakers with separate sections for low and high frequencies (woofers and tweeters), connected via an audio crossover network, and more carefully engineered enclosures. This development exposed the public to better fidelity than home equipment was capable of at the time.
After World War II, several innovations created the conditions for a major improvement of home-audio quality:
- Reel-to-reel audio tape recording helped musical artists such as Bing Crosby make and distribute recordings with better fidelity.
- The advent of the 33⅓ RPM Long Play (LP) microgroove vinyl record, with low surface noise and quantitatively-specified equalization curves.
- FM radio, with wider audio bandwidth and less susceptibility to signal interference and fading than AM radio.
- Better amplifier designs, with more attention to frequency response and much higher power output capability, allowing audio peaks to be reproduced without distortion.
In the 1950s, the term high fidelity began to be used by audio manufacturers as a marketing term to describe records and equipment which were intended to provide faithful sound reproduction. While some consumers simply interpreted high fidelity as fancy and expensive equipment, many found the difference in quality between "hi-fi" and the then standard AM radios. Audiophiles paid attention to technical characteristics and bought individual components, such as separate turntables, radio tuners, preamplifiers, power amplifiers and loudspeakers. Some enthusiasts assembled their own loudspeaker systems. In the 1950s, hi-fi became a generic term, to some extent displacing phonograph and record player.
In the late 1950s and early 1960s, the development of the Westrex single-groove stereophonic record led to the next wave of home-audio improvement, and in common parlance, stereo displaced hi-fi. Records were now played on a stereo. In the world of the audiophile, however, high fidelity continued and continues to refer to the goal of highly-accurate sound reproduction and to the technological resources available for approaching that goal. A very popular type of system for reproducing music from the 1970s onwards is the integrated music centre--the successor to the older stereogram or radiogram. Purists will generally avoid referring to these systems as high fidelity, though some are capable of very good quality sound reproduction.
See also:
www.tanzania.eu – you will love this country
www.diving.eu – discover underwater world
www.relax.pl – database of all kinds of objects, from agrotourism to hotels and inns in Poland
www.schwickert.eu
www.mohry.eu
www.lordsofwar.eu
Other websites on the subject of new technologies and inventions:
www.tanzania.eu – you will love this country
www.diving.eu – discover underwater world
www.relax.pl – database of all kinds of objects, from agrotourism to hotels and inns in Poland
www.schwickert.eu
www.mohry.eu
www.lordsofwar.eu




