Almost immediately after its introduction, Lansing began work on the development of a permanent magnet version that was to become the famous model 604 Duplex. At this time, Altec Lansing was involved in a wartime development effort to produce equipment for the Marine Airborne Detection program. General information. Altec Lansing web site (December 2003): Altec Lansing Technologies, Inc. Is the industry leader in the design, manufacture, marketing and support of advanced audio solutions for PCs and related technologies. The company strives to provide outstanding performance and value to leading computer manufacturers, resellers and end users.
Private | |
Industry | Audio electronics |
---|---|
Founded | 1927[2] |
Headquarters | 1407 Broadway, , |
Ike S Franco (Chairman) | |
Products | Consumer loudspeakers, headphones, in-ear monitors |
Owners | Infinity Lifestyle Brands |
Number of employees | ≈600[3] |
Website | alteclansing.com |
Altec Lansing is an American audio electronics company founded in 1927.[4] Their primary products are loudspeakers and associated audio electronics for professional, home, automotive and multimedia applications.[5]
Engineers at Western Electric, who later formed Altec Services Company, developed the technology for motion picture sound that was introduced in 1927 with the release of The Jazz Singer.[6] Originally, Altec Services Company serviced the theater sound systems the company founders had helped develop. In 1941 the Altec Services Company purchased the nearly bankrupt Lansing Manufacturing Company and melded the two names, forming the Altec Lansing Corporation, and with the manufacturing capabilities of the former Lansing Manufacturing Company, they quickly expanded into manufacturing horn loudspeakers.
In 1958 the Altec Lansing Corporation was purchased by James Ling who made it part of LTV Ling Altec. LTV spun off Altec which it loaded down with debt first. By 1974, the company was saddled with debt. It was reorganized under Chapter 11 as Altec Corporation and continued for 10 years. Altec filed a second bankruptcy. In 1984, Gulton Industries purchased the brand out of Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Gulton was acquired by Mark IV Audio.Since then, there has been a string of owners, the rights to the name for home speakers was purchased in 1986 by Sparkomatic,[7] with the Pro equipment still made by Mark IV Audio, Mark IV sold out to Telex, who closed down the Pro division and folded its products into EV. The full rights to the name were then acquired by Sparkomatic who changed their name to Altec Lansing Technologies,2005 Altec Lansing Technologies was acquired by Plantronics, 2009 brand name bought by Prophet Equity, and has been owned since 2012 by the Infinity Group, a company which acquires struggling companies.[8]
Popular loudspeakers included the Altec Lansing Duplex 600-series coaxial loudspeaker, studio monitors from the 1940s to the 1980s,[9] and the Altec 'Voice of the Theatre' line of loudspeakers widely used in movie theaters, concert halls, and also in rock concerts from the 1960s to the 1990s, such as custom designs used at Woodstock Festival.
- 1History
History[edit]
Conception and early products[edit]
In 1930 AT&T's Western Electric established a division to install and service loudspeakers and electronic products for motion-picture use. Named Electrical Research Products, Inc. and commonly referred to by the acronym ERPI, it became the target of an anti-trust suit brought by Stanley K. Oldden.[10] By 1936, Western Electric had shed its audio-equipment manufacturing and sales division, bought by International Projector and Motiograph, and was looking to dissolve the associated service division. ERPI was purchased as part of a consent decree in 1937 by a group of ERPI executives, including George Carrington, Sr., Leon Whitney 'Mike' Conrow, Bert Sanford, Jr., and Alvis A. Ward, with funding from three Wall Street investors. They reincorporated as 'Altec Service Company', the 'Altec' standing for 'all technical'.[11] Company executives promised they would never make or sell audio equipment.[11]
An Altec Lansing speaker cabinet used for movie theater sound.
The Altec Services Company purchased the bankrupt Lansing Manufacturing Company and melded the two names, forming the Altec Lansing Corporation on May 1, 1941. The first Altec Lansing power amplifier, Model 142B, was produced that same year. James Bullough Lansing worked for Altec Lansing, then in 1946 he left to found the James B. Lansing Company (JBL), another manufacturer of high-quality professional loudspeakers, which competed with Altec Lansing. Altec Lansing produced a line of professional and high-fidelity audio equipment, starting with a line of horn-based loudspeaker systems. First developed for use in motion-picture theaters, these products were touted[by whom?] for their fidelity, efficiency and high sound-level capability. Products included 'biflex' speakers (where frequency range was increased by a flexible 'decoupling' of a small center area of the speaker's cone from a larger 'woofer' area) and the 604-series of coaxial speakers (which employed a high-efficiency compression driver mounted to the rear of the 604's low-frequency magnet, and exited through a multicellular horn that passed through center of the woofer's cone).
Altec Lansing also made the Voice of the Theatre systems. The design resulted from a collaboration between John Hilliard and Jim Lansing.Douglas Shearer didn't hesitate to approve the Hilliard's proposal and authorized 'any reasonable budget'. Hilliard became the team leader of this new project. Hilliard immediately recruited Lansing Manufacturing, Robert Stephens, a design draftsman on MGM's staff, and Harry Kimball.The speaker was named the Shearer horn .Later on these models were divided:The smallest model, the A-7, used a medium-sized sectoral metal horn for high frequencies, which featured dividers (sectors) to provide control sound dispersion, plus a medium-sized wooden low-frequency enclosure, which functioned as a hybrid bass-horn/bass-reflex enclosure. The most often used Voice of the Theatre system was the A-4, many of which are still in use in motion picture theaters as of 2018.[citation needed] The efficiency of all of these products originally provided high sound pressure levels from the limited amplifier power available at the time. The original Voice of the Theatre series included the A-1, A-2, A-4, and the A-5. The A-7 and A-8 were designed for smaller venues.
The early products were revised and enhanced over time with the addition of rubberized speaker- surrounds and other modern features. Bill Hanley used Altec high frequency drivers and horns along with JBL bass drivers in his custom-built loudspeaker system for the Woodstock Festival in 1969.[12]Some professional Altec Lansing products remained in use well into the 1990s.
Altec Service Co. and Altec Lansing Professional audio products[edit]
James Ling purchased the Altec Lansing Corporation from the ailing George Carrington, Sr., in 1958. By the time James Ling spun Altec Lansing off in 1974, his company, LTV-Ling-Altec, had heavy debts. In 1984, Gulton Industries, Inc., purchased the Altec Sound Products Division from the Altec Lansing Corporation, which was operating under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. Included with the purchase were the tooling, parts and product inventories, distributor network, designs, patents, and assets of the Sound Products Division of Altec Lansing. The motion picture theater sound installation and repair business, Altec Service Co., was sold to J. Bruce Waddell, then head of Altec Service, and comptroller Robert V. Gandolfi. They established it as A.S.C. Technical Services in Richardson, Texas.
The Altec Lansing Corporation was formed by Gulton Industries as part of the purchase and headquartered in Oklahoma City, the site of the University Sound factory built by Jimmy Ling when he moved there from White Plains, New York. Prior to the purchase, Altec Lansing had been headquartered in Yorba Linda, California, but it was moved as part of an effort to reduce operating costs.
Altec Lansing Corporation produced professional audio products until 1995, when Telex Communications, who had purchased Altec Lansing's parent company, EVI Audio, Inc., in 1997, consolidated all of their electronics manufacturing facilities into one location in Minnesota.
Altec Lansing Bookshelf loudspeakers
Post-1996[edit]
In 1996, Altec Lansing Technologies Multimedia established an R&D center in Kfar Saba, Israel. The center, known as ALST Technical Excellence Center, cooperate with STMicroelectronics (ALST = Altec Lansing + STMicro) and focused on advanced multimedia technologies such as USB audio, surround sound and wireless audio as well as on handheld video. The center was closed in 2001 and the development activities moved to the Milford headquarters.[13] In May 2000, Altec Lansing's Professional division was closed by Telex and the Altec Lansing was later sold to Sparkomatic and renamed Altec Lansing Technologies.[14] The Altec Lansing Professional line was relaunched in April 2002 by Altec Lansing Technologies using a few former executives and sound engineers of the old Oklahoma City-based Altec Lansing Corporation, bringing Altec's professional and consumer products under the same roof for the first time since 1986. The company later dropped the professional audio products and Altec Lansing Professional's Oklahoma City offices were closed in late 2006 and all remaining activities relocated to the headquarters in Milford, Pennsylvania.[citation needed]
An Altec Lansing PC speaker
An Altec Lansing iM227 speaker from the Orbit M series
On 30 April 2001 Altec Lansing Technologies launched their first line of headphones named as the AHP series. This series of headphones had various different designs and price ranges.[15] In February 2004, Altec Lansing Technologies reissued a number of loudspeakers starting with the A7 Voice of the Theatre, manufactured in the US with some changes to the enclosure. Similarly, Altec Lansing Technologies reissued the 510, 508 and 305 loudspeakers.[16] Very few were actually made. On July 11, 2005, Altec Lansing Technologies announced that it was to be acquired by Plantronics for approximately $166 million.[17] On September 10, 2008, Altec Lansing Technologies went through a corporate makeover changing its name to Altec Lansing LLC and its logo from a 'whirlpool' to an abstraction of a multi-cellular horn.[18]
On 1 October 2009 Altec Lansing LLC announced that it was to be acquired by Prophet Equity for approximately 18 million dollars.[19] In July 2011, Altec Lansing LLC announced the opening of new West Coast headquarters in San Diego, California. Brendon Stead joined as Vice President of Product Management and Engineering. Stead was formerly the General Manager and Vice President of Harman International and Labtec.[20] On October 18, 2012, The Infinity Group bought Altec Lansing for $17.5 million at auction thus saving the company from bankruptcy. Infinity specializes in acquiring and turning around struggling or bankrupt consumer brands.[8]
References[edit]
- ^'Profile image'. pbs.twimg.com. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'Service Center Altec Lansing hyderabad'. allservicecenters.com. Archived from the original on 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^https://www.owler.com/company/alteclansing.Missing or empty
|title=
(help) - ^'Company Overview of Altec Lansing/AL Infinity, LLC'. Archived from the original on 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2016-09-16.
- ^'Altec Lansing Creates a Range of Almost Indestructible Bluetooth Speakers - PLuGHiTz Live - Special Events - Show Notes - PLuGHiTz Live'. www.plughitzlive.com. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'TIMELINE: A Legacy of Sound'. www.alteclansing.com. Archived from the original on 2004-08-25. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'ALTEC LANSING'. www.audioheritage.org. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^ ab'Infinity Group Buys Altec Lansing Name, Plans To Rebuild Brand'. www.twice.com. 2012-10-18. Archived from the original on 2013-12-02. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^McGowan, Chris (November 15, 1980). 'Sound Pioneers'. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media. 92 (46): 42. ISSN0006-2510.
- ^'Ask Pacent Suit Dismissed'. Motion Picture Herald. 129. 1937. p. 76.
- ^ ab'ERPI Turns Over Sound Servicing to Former Heads in New Altec'. Motion Picture Herald. 129. 1937. p. 29.
- ^Evans, Mike; Kingsbury, Paul (2009). Woodstock: Three Days That Rocked the World. Sterling Publishing. p. 56. ISBN1402766238.
- ^'ST Microelectronics, Altec Join For Audio Research'.
- ^http://www.audioheritage.org/html/profiles/lmco/iconic.htm
- ^'Altec Lansing enters headphone market'. www.twice.com. Archived from the original on 2013-06-24. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'Altec Lansing | Legacy Product Line'(PDF). soundhouse.co.kr. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'Altec Lansing | Bluetooth Speakers, Headphones & Earbuds'. Altec Lansing. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'Roundup: Altec Lansing reveals new logo, audio products'. CNET. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^'Prophet Equity Buying Altec Lansing - PE HUB'. PE HUB. 2009-10-05. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
- ^Lansing, Altec. 'Altec Lansing Looks West and Opens New Office in San Diego, Focuses on Audio Solutions and Emerging Technologies'. www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2016-05-24.
External links[edit]
- Website with history and pictures of Altec Lansing.
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Altec_Lansing&oldid=902124721'
How to Update Device Drivers Quickly & Easily
Tech Tip: Updating drivers manually requires some computer skills and patience. A faster and easier option is to use the Driver Update Utility for Altec Lansing to scan your system for free. The utility tells you which specific drivers are out-of-date for all of your devices.
![Altec Lansing Technologies Altec Lansing Technologies](https://pmcdn.priceminister.com/photo/altec-lansing-vs2721-enceinte-1171834645_ML.jpg)
Step 1 - Download Your Driver
To get the latest driver, including Windows 10 drivers, you can choose from a list of most popular Altec Lansing downloads. Click the download button next to the matching model name. After you complete your download, move on to Step 2.
If your driver is not listed and you know the model name or number of your Altec Lansing device, you can use it to search our driver archive for your Altec Lansing device model. Simply type the model name and/or number into the search box and click the Search button. You may see different versions in the results. Choose the best match for your PC and operating system.
If you don’t know the model name or number, you can start to narrow your search down by choosing which category of Altec Lansing device you have (such as Printer, Scanner, Video, Network, etc.). Start by selecting the correct category from our list of Altec Lansing Device Drivers by Category.
Need more help finding the right driver? You can request a driver and we will find it for you. We employ a team from around the world. They add hundreds of new drivers to our site every day.
Tech Tip: If you are having trouble deciding which is the right driver, try the Driver Update Utility for Altec Lansing. It is a software utility that will find the right driver for you - automatically.
Step 2 - Install Your Driver
After you download your new driver, then you have to install it. To install a driver in Windows, you will need to use a built-in utility called Device Manager. It allows you to see all of the devices recognized by your system, and the drivers associated with them.
How to Open Device Manager
- In Windows 8.1 & Windows 10, right-click the Start menu and select Device Manager
- In Windows 8, swipe up from the bottom, or right-click anywhere on the desktop and choose 'All Apps' -> swipe or scroll right and choose 'Control Panel' (under Windows System section) -> Hardware and Sound -> Device Manager
- In Windows 7, click Start -> Control Panel -> Hardware and Sound -> Device Manager
- In Windows Vista, click Start -> Control Panel -> System and Maintenance -> Device Manager
- In Windows XP, click Start -> Control Panel -> Performance and Maintenance -> System -> Hardware tab -> Device Manager button
How to Install drivers using Device Manager
- Locate the device and model that is having the issue and double-click on it to open the Properties dialog box.
- Select the Driver tab.
- Click the Update Driver button and follow the instructions.
In most cases, you will need to reboot your computer in order for the driver update to take effect.
Tech Tip: Driver downloads and updates come in a variety of file formats with different file extensions. For example, you may have downloaded an EXE, INF, ZIP, or SYS file. Each file type has a slighty different installation procedure to follow.
If you are having trouble installing your driver, you should use the Driver Update Utility for Altec Lansing. It is a software utility that automatically finds, downloads and installs the right driver for your system. You can even backup your drivers before making any changes, and revert back in case there were any problems.
Try it now to safely update all of your drivers in just a few clicks. Once you download and run the utility, it will scan for out-of-date or missing drivers:
When the scan is complete, the driver update utility will display a results page showing which drivers are missing or out-of-date. You can update individual drivers, or all of the necessary drivers with one click.
For more help, visit our Driver Support Page for step-by-step videos on how to install drivers for every file type.