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A Short History of High Efficiency Weaponry

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Posted on January 21, 2017 at 09:36:33
Tom Brennan
Audiophile

Posts: 5853
Joined: January 2, 2000


As you may know Paul Klipsch developed the Heresy and LaScala during WW II when he worked for the Army munitions depot in Hope Arkansas. They were intended to be used against fanatical Japanese defenders in caves and bunkers, but the Army decided the use of the Heresy against the Japanese was inhumane and decided to use flamethrowers, gasoline and satchel charges instead.

In any event the advantage of the Klipsch weapons was their compactness and light weight; the LaScala was capable of being used in a WW II infantry company's heavy weapons platoon with the mortars and heavy machine guns and the Heresy could be used as a squad support weapon like a BAR. Ammunition would have been Nelson Eddy-Jeanette McDonald recordings played from battery powered small wire recorders based on German models smuggled out of Germany before the war by the same Polish intelligence agents who smuggled out the early Enigma machines.

Even though the Army decided against using the Heresy-LaScala weapons system in it's drive across New Guinea and into the Phillipines, the Navy did consider the system for Marine Corps use in the Navy's Central Pacific drive. But Admiral King, always jealous of Navy prerogatives in the Pacific War, decided against using a weapon developed by the Army.

Patton, in late 1944 while his Third Army was bogged down reducing the fortresses of Metz, asked the War Department for the Heresy-LaScala system but since the system had not been put into production he had to wait while an effort was made to cobble a few together (by this time attitudes toward the Germans had hardened considerably over those of 1942-43). Before the Heresys reached the European Theater the stalemate at Metz was broken and the war entered it's final highly mobile phase with the breakout across the Rhine and into Germany; a mode of war for which PWK's weapons were unsuited.

"Bomber" Harris, the brutal and ruthless head of Britsh Bomber Command, heard of the Heresy-LaScala system and wanted to fit Lancaster bombers to drop over German cities loads of Heresys fitted with miniature vacuum tube radio receivers tuned to a station in London that would broadcast Gilbert and Sullivan songs. He thought this would strike a bigger blow against German morale than the firebombing of German cities. His vision of a thousand bombers over Berlin releasing hundreds of thousands of Heresys screeching "I'm the Very Model of a Modern Major General" is terrifying indeed. Unfortunately for Harris the best British "boffins" were at work on radar, Enigma and iceberg aircraft carriers and the engineers assigned to the program soon fell out arguing whether the Heresy sounded worse with single ended or push-pull amplification. This squabbling torpedoed the development and the scheme was dropped.

After the war American Army scientific teams spread out across western Germany to find evidence of German research into rumored V Speakers but though Klangfilm had a small program Hitler was fixated on von Braun's rockets and the German speaker weapon project was stillborn, especially after several of Klangfilm's top engineers were killed in an accident trying to make "werewolf" crossover capacitors filled with T Stoff.

Post war development of the Heresy-LaScala system, including Curtis LeMay's efforts to make it a part of American Cold War strategy and Soviet efforts to counteract it (involving a frantic crash Soviet program to develop their own using reverse engineered University and Electro-Voice drivers supplied them by Soviet agents employed in New York's famous "Radio Row") is a little known story now being researched by Richard Rhodes, the writer of "The Making of the Atomic Bomb" and "Dark Sun: The Making of the Hydrogen Bomb".

JBL certainly had an eye to possible Defense Department contracts when they developed the infamous 075 tweeter. There are persistent but unconfirmed rumors the CIA experimented with it, both during the famous LSD experiments and possibly during the Bay of Pigs. It's known that Dick Bissell pushed for arming the Cuban émigrés at the Bay of Pigs with 075 tweeters but Allen Dulles feared their falling into Communist hands.

The firm stance Kennedy took during the Cuban Missile Crisis is a strong indication the Soviets were unable to duplicate 075 tweeter technology on a large scale, even if some had fallen into their hands. Of course the Soviets well understood the technology of the far less powerful EV and University tweeters but the thermonuclear JBL was beyond their resources.

Latest research indicates that the Soviets, wanting to make a cheaper and simpler weapon, a T-34 so to speak, eventually abandoned the American multi-driver model and went "single driver" with copies of Lowthers smuggled out of Britain by Kim Philby and Guy Burgess.

A little known article of the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty signed by Kennedy and Kruschev banned the development of weapons based on "obnoxious speakers". Kruschev, who'd never forgotten the suffering of the Russian people during the Great Patriotic War, is said to have been adamant in his demand that such development be stopped.

A mysterious American audiophile and Russian emigre known as "Romy the Cat" is said to be a veteran of the Soviet program but to this very day refuses to talk about it or even acknowledge the existence of the program. However some Cold War historians claim this "Romy"s prodigious talent at assembling dangerously bad horn speaker systems bespeaks a sophisticated level of knowledge no layman could've gained.

In any event we now know the REAL reason for the development of the ferrite magnet Lowther: the British, not wanting to be outdone by the Soviet copies upped the ante so to speak by developing the ferrite version. But as with the famous Castle Bravo H-bomb test the British scientists were totally unprepared for and shocked by the results of their efforts.

By the terms of the post war Japanese Constitution Japan may only use speaker weapons in self defense and is treaty limited to speakers no more dangerous than the Pioneer HPM series. Before the war, much as the Japanese Navy was modeled on Britain's Royal Navy so were Japanese speaker weapons modeled on such dangerous British speakers as the Voight-Lowthers. In addition the Japanese were much taken with the Voight "bath tub" horn, for obvious reasons. However Japanese speaker weapon research, though fixated on the British single driver model, came up with nothing more dangerous than the rather benign Fostex and Diatone weapons which lacked firepower and had the serious drawback of needing their voice coils to be regularly oiled. After the war Japanese development followed the multi-way American model, as with the previously noted HPM series for which the Japanese had high hopes of export sales to Third World armies. However Syria's HPMs failed dismally in the Yom Kippur War when pitted against Israel's highly modified JBLs and sales plummeted but the Japanese cleverly rebounded by pitching the weapon at marijuana befuddled young American audio enthusiasts by means of advertising campaigns in the National Lampoon and Penthouse.

 

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    ...
Thank you for providing this edifying history of, posted on January 21, 2017 at 11:24:21
uncle mag
Audiophile

Posts: 852
Location: sf bay area
Joined: June 29, 2004
audible weaponry of WWII, now set in digital stone, for future historians to contemplate.

 

+1...Explains much of the NWO we're experiencing today! (nt), posted on January 21, 2017 at 11:45:05
Steve O
Audiophile

Posts: 12362
Location: SE MI
Joined: September 6, 2001

 

"digital stone" -- I like that (nt), posted on January 21, 2017 at 11:53:16
mhardy6647
Audiophile

Posts: 16015
Location: New England
Joined: October 12, 1999
Contributor
  Since:
October 23, 2016
nt
all the best,
mrh

 

Hi Tom, posted on January 21, 2017 at 14:11:44
Just wake up from a long nap?

 

Meds Run out??, posted on January 21, 2017 at 17:32:36
bare
Audiophile

Posts: 1879
Joined: April 14, 2009
Likely the reason behind the Babble.

 

He knows of what he speaks., posted on January 21, 2017 at 18:10:03
He's just been missing for awhile. I hope he comes back as Tom is always entertaining.

 

RE: A Warning Cal!l, posted on January 21, 2017 at 20:18:45
Paul Eizik
Audiophile

Posts: 2120
Joined: September 15, 2001
John Atkinson recently reprinted a comment by J. Gordon Holt where JGH stated that audiophiles who listened to horns at home had to do so as to compensate for their hearing loss. The message should be clear to younger audiophiles: "Don't come after us!". If we work together we can get the prices down on all those vintage horn drivers to the point where investors will lose interest in them. Those interested in the subject of audio in warfare would be well advised to read the book Secret Soldiers which documented the use of recorded sound effects during WW2. When this was tested on our own soldiers, many swore they actually saw real tanks maneuvering in the twilight when there was just the recorded sound of tanks being played back. So give up horns now before you start seeing things!

Paul

 

RE: if they would have, posted on January 21, 2017 at 21:14:37
put pistol grips and bayonet lugs on them, they would have been banned domestically.

 

RE: if they would have, posted on January 22, 2017 at 05:04:13
Tom Brennan
Audiophile

Posts: 5853
Joined: January 2, 2000
Pistol grips on a Heresy, that's funny. Front and rear, like a Tommy Gun. If that Crites guy made pistol grips for them the Klipschies would be all over themselves saying what a great mod it is.

That would be a funny photoshop thing.

 

RE: Hi Tom, been more than a few years, posted on January 22, 2017 at 06:12:53
Lima Tank plant and High-efficiency mid-West Audio Fest venue. Coincidence? Perhaps not.

 

RE: A Short History of High Efficiency Weaponry, posted on January 22, 2017 at 11:30:54
Crazy Dave
Audiophile

Posts: 14371
Location: East Coast
Joined: October 4, 2001
I am going to rig my Heresys to a high powered 70's Japanese receiver and hook it to my burglar alarm. It will keep thieves and audiophiles away from my equipment.

Dave

 

You sir, are as the youf say..., posted on January 22, 2017 at 15:40:05
musetap
Audiophile

Posts: 31872
Location: San Francisco
Joined: July 8, 2003
Contributor
  Since:
January 28, 2004
The Bomb!

Excellent!

"Once this was all Black Plasma and Imagination"-Michael McClure



 

Actually..., posted on January 22, 2017 at 16:45:55
Several years ago, Danley Sound Labs built a subwoofer to be used against enemies in "the field". It was called the Matterhorn. It consisted of a large number of 15" drivers housed in a folded horn which was built into a shipping container, the kind used for, well, shipping on ships.

Google "Danley matterhorn subwoofer" to read all about it.

:)

 

RE: in high school, posted on January 22, 2017 at 17:43:51
I dated a gal whose step father (ex railroad cop) decided to be a hard-ass and clean a gun on the kitchen table the first time I picked her up for a date.

It was completely disassembled without the stocks, but I recognized it immediately.

"WOW!! A Thompson! Early one too, receiver top bolt, and a cuts compensator! Have the drum magazine and vertical fore grip?"

After his initial fluster, we got along famously. I miss him.

 

RE: Hi Tom, posted on January 22, 2017 at 17:52:11
Tom Brennan
Audiophile

Posts: 5853
Joined: January 2, 2000
Hi Mike

Well, I dehorned some years ago when I moved from a large house to a high rise apartment on the Lake in Chicago. I went with Martin Logan Vista stats which fit much easier into a smaller space and had many of the virtues of good horns, not their dynamics of course. Now my wife and I live in a motorhome, "fulltiming" as RVers say ( yes, RV is now a verb) and are going to wander the country for awhile. So now my hi-fi consists of a bluray machine, an ipad, Apple TV, the audio outs of my TV and several sets of headphones, the preferred ones being AKG Q-701s.

Oh, the coach came with a surround sound system with ceiling speakers but I never use it. I was thinking of installing a Jolida FX-10 tube integrated in the electronics bay and feeding some good quality ceiling speakers with it, Fostexes say, but sharing a small space it's better that I use headphones anyway.

 

RE: A Short History of High Efficiency Weaponry, posted on January 23, 2017 at 08:23:44
fstein
Audiophile

Posts: 2994
Location: fstein
Joined: May 18, 2006
I understand that at MIT Amar Bose was working on a Cloaking Device, which explains the imaging on the original 901

 

Glad to hear your doing well...., posted on January 23, 2017 at 08:28:03
I'll be seeing you on the road soon.

 

RE: A Short History of High Efficiency Weaponry, posted on January 23, 2017 at 10:09:12
freddyi
Audiophile

Posts: 3852
Joined: December 6, 2001

Karlson Evangelist

 

Huh, posted on January 23, 2017 at 10:34:33
jec01
Audiophile

Posts: 1462
Location: Baltimore, Maryland
Joined: September 22, 2004
I always assumed that Bose speakers were a byproduct of some weapons design program in the conflicts between India and Pakistan. I guess I was wrong.

Happy listening,

Jim

"The passage of my life is measured out in shirts."
- Brian Eno

 

RE: Huh, posted on January 23, 2017 at 11:54:18
Tom Brennan
Audiophile

Posts: 5853
Joined: January 2, 2000
During the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan Pathan hillmen used locally made copies of the Bose 901 made with hand tools from cardboard boxes and discarded bicycle wheels. However they were ineffective and even actual Bose models given the Pathans by CIA agents lacked the flamethrower like power of Klipsch, JBL and ferrite Lowther weapons.

In the late 1960s the British attempted to take advantage of the extreme beaminess of the Quad ESL to make a weapon that could be used to minimize civilian casualties in urban fighting in Northern Ireland, where IRA and UDA fighters were often shielded by the many civilians around them. But though the prototype Quad weapon was quite precise it, like the Bose, simply lacked the firepower needed.

 

Well, there you go, then. nt, posted on January 23, 2017 at 12:45:32
jec01
Audiophile

Posts: 1462
Location: Baltimore, Maryland
Joined: September 22, 2004
nt

Happy listening,

Jim

"The passage of my life is measured out in shirts."
- Brian Eno

 

RE: A Short History of High Efficiency Weaponry, posted on January 23, 2017 at 19:49:00
hollowboy
Audiophile

Posts: 263
Location: Melbourne
Joined: June 26, 2007
The Heresy and LaScala years are arguably the most famous, but the US has run at least thirty donation campaigns since then, distributing surplus and over-run audio equipment to the less fortunate.

Despite there being no formal JBL dealer network in Laos, by a amazing and under-applauded effort, each Laotian was gifted with almost a ton of remarkably configured audio gear - much of it delivered in large arrays. Despite lacking roads, railways and phones, the people of Laos were finally able to enjoy Kenny Rogers and Ike Turner in incredible detail and at truly spectacular volume.

The people of Laos still have a massive stockpile of about 80 million new old stock compression drivers. These are constantly surprising and delighting new audiences.

 

So what's wrong with kenny and ike?...nt, posted on January 24, 2017 at 17:13:46
nt

 

Fast forward to today where, posted on January 28, 2017 at 19:38:04
E-Stat
Audiophile

Posts: 37589
Joined: May 12, 2000
Contributor
  Since:
April 5, 2002
the ideal position for Klipsch speakers is...

 

RE: Fast forward to today where, posted on January 29, 2017 at 09:50:42
used-hifi
Audiophile

Posts: 1100
Location: Surprise AZ
Joined: March 18, 2003
now that funny, yes Tom IMO is correct LOL



Lawrence

 

Hilarious Tom, thanks! (nt), posted on March 26, 2017 at 15:45:39
sunnysal
Audiophile

Posts: 845
Location: Central America
Joined: May 27, 2000
nope
Jean-Francois Lessard 2A3 PP amp
Marantz 7T Preamp
Klipschorns w/ALK xovers
Squeezebox Touch
Asus netbook running itunes and LMS feeding
MSB link DACIII w24/96k
MSB digital director
Technics M85 Cassette

 

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