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  2. HH Electronics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HH_Electronics

    HH Electronics is a British amplifier manufacturer that was founded in 1968 by Mike Harrison, Malcolm Green and Graham Lowes in Harston near Cambridge, England, where its first solid state TPA and MA range of studio quality amplifiers were designed and manufactured. These amplifiers were used by many recording and broadcasting studios ...

  3. Acoustic Control Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_Control_Corporation

    Most of the amplifiers produced by ACC were solid-state, but a few models later in production were valve amps. The company is remembered in particular for its Acoustic 361 bass stack, consisting of an Acoustic 360 bass pre-amplifier and one or two Acoustic 361 W-bins, each featuring a built-in 200-watt RMS power amplifier and a rear-facing 18" Cerwin-Vega loudspeaker.

  4. Dumble Amplifiers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dumble_Amplifiers

    In 2012, Vintage Guitar magazine said the Dumble Overdrive Special is the most valuable in the product line, with used amplifiers fetching between $70,000 and $150,000. [4] Other models have sold for more. [5] Dumble built two or three amplifiers per year, primarily for celebrity musicians and studios.

  5. Midas Consoles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midas_Consoles

    A 19-inch rack holding several professional audio devices including a Midas XL88 8×8 matrix mixer at the bottom In January 2014 at the NAMM Show in Anaheim, California, Midas introduced the M32 ($4,999 MSRP in USA), based largely on parent company Music Tribe's highly-successful Behringer X32 mixer, sharing most of the X32's operating system ...

  6. Mixing console - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixing_console

    A typical, simple application combines signals from microphones on stage into an amplifier that drives one set of loudspeakers for the audience. A DJ mixer may have only two channels, for mixing two record players. A coffeehouse's small stage might only have a six-channel mixer, enough for two singer-guitarists and a percussionist.

  7. QSC Audio Products - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QSC_Audio_Products

    In the early 1990s, QSC diversified from power amplifiers by starting development of network audio systems for remote control and monitoring of amplifier systems. QSC called its system QSControl (pronounced "Q's Control"). The company was one of the first licensees of the MediaLink networking technology developed by the Lone Wolf Corp. for ...