In our multifunctional world of gadgets and super-connectivity, it's easy to forget what's really
important when it comes to personal tech: ease-of-use and high quality output. Audio pioneer
Henry Kloss has been designing radios that deliver on both counts for over five decades. Kloss's
latest effort is a potent antidote to today's over-the-top techno-lust.
The Tivoli Model One Table Radio
has an almost Zen-like simplicity and a cool retro design. On the front
of the handsome wood case you find only a speaker, tuning, volume and
AM/FM selector knobs, and two indicator lights (one for power, one for
signal strength). No bouncing disco lights, no digital read-outs, no
tangle of audio cables sprouting from the back. But don't let the chunky
WWII-era tuning knob and the radio's diminutive size (4.5" x 8.4" x
5.25") fool you. This little fella is filled with state-of-the-art electronics.
The Tivoli is the first radio of its kind to use a GaAs MES-FET mixer
(a technology more commonly found in digital mobile phones and military-grade
radios) - allowing it to go where other radios can't. Most digital tuners
have a hard time tuning in closely spaced stations and they can't pick
up many distant ones. The Tivoli can. You'll be amazed by its reach,
even using only the built-in antenna. For an even stronger FM signal,
there's a Type-F connector in the back for a cable hook-up or an external
antenna.
And with one small mono speaker, you may think the Tivoli only
delivers portable radio sound. Not so. This radio can fill any room
with the kind of pristine sound that will literally turn heads. Try
it next to your fancy bookshelf stereo system and see which comes out
on top.
The Tivoli Model One's price tag ($99) is perhaps the most amazing
thing about this top-of-the-line component, which will probably outlast
the analog radio that it's designed to receive. Hope Henry's next model
is digital.
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