A marriage made in Skanderborg
Every left and right Contour Legacy loudspeaker is, like a swan, paired for life. It has a partner, from the moment its components are carefully placed on our workbench in Jutland.
Each panel of each cabinet is made from a composite board made from the same source, chosen as if it were a vineyard for a domaine. It’s faced by a layer of sustainable, tactile, warm American Walnut. Martin – a man with twenty years’ experience of making Dynaudio speakers – selects these panels, two by two, so that their grain looks similar. It can only be done by eye.
It’s a labour of love, and a process that would be unfathomable to have replicated by some anonymous robot in some anonymous factory.
That robot wouldn’t clamp each joint bonded by our Glue Master, (yes, that’s his real title). It wouldn’t be concerned about the precision of the joints, cut to fractions of one degree. Or the effect the weather will have on the integrity of the jointed angles (our humans make sure all their glueing is finished by the end of the day to stop any unwanted changes).
It wouldn’t reject a pair of speakers because one of them had a blemish almost invisible to the naked eye.
A robot wouldn’t sense the feeling you get as you run your fingers over a tiny groove in the front facing panel. It wouldn’t take pleasure in the smell of hardwood, as the doors to the workshop are opened, early morning, at the same time as laptops.
Making a pair of Contour Legacy loudspeakers is time consuming – and even slightly obsessive, with a magical result that certain people appreciate.
Like all Dynaudio speakers, that obsession extends to the bits you can’t see, or rarely look at. Like the dual-flared bass-ports, which gently control airflow and bass response, or the heavy, stable cast-iron base. No sticky-out feet here.