Garrard Engineering and Manufacturing Company

The Garrard Engineering and Manufacturing Company of Swindon, Wiltshire, was a British company that was famous for producing high-quality gramophone turntables. It was formed by the jewellers Garrard & Co in 1915. The company was sold to Plessey, an electronics conglomerate, in 1960. During the period 1976-1978, Garrard developed demonstrators of the novel video disc technology. Although the team recognised the future potential of this data storage technology, Plessey chose not to invest. After several years in decline, Garrard was sold by Plessey to Gradiente Electronics of Brazil in 1979 and series production was moved to Brazil (Manaus). The remaining Garrard research and development operation in Swindon was reduced to a skeleton operation until completely shut down in 1992. Then, Gradiente licensed the Garrard name to Terence O'Sullivan, who operated as Loricraft Audio, in 1997.

A Garrard turntable, Model 1212
Garrard Engineering and Manufacturing Company
IndustryElectronics
Founded1915 (1915)
HeadquartersSwindon, United Kingdom,
Productsturntables
ParentPlessey (1960-1978)
Gradiente (1979-1992)
Loricraft Audio (1997-2018)
Cadence Audio SA (2018-current)
Websitehttps://garrardturntables.co.uk

Between 1992 and 1997, the Garrard brand name was licensed to other companies in the US, which imported many electronic items built by many different and unrelated Far Eastern manufacturers. These included "Garrard"-branded cassette decks, CD players, stereo receivers, boom-box radio/cassette machines, portable "Walkman" type cassette players, serial-port printer cables, universal TV/audio remote controls, and other miscellany, including turntables that had nothing to do with any original Garrard design.

In 2018, Cadence Audio SA, who also own the British turntable and tonearm manufacturer SME Limited, took ownership of the Garrard brand and registered trademarks when they purchased Loricraft Audio Ltd. The business was restructured to run under the name of Garrard Turntables UK Ltd.

The Garrard 301 and 401 Transcription Turntables

Garrard 401 turntable with SME 3009 tonearm.

The Garrard 301 Transcription Turntable was the first transcription turntable that supported all extant commercial playback formats – the 33, 45 and 78 rpm records of the time. The first model was called the Garrard 301. Oil and grease bearing versions were made. The later 401 was nearly identical mechanically, but with a redesigned exterior, more powerful motor, slightly different eddy current braking speed control and different turntable thrust bearing. Both models were used by the BBC and in commercial radio stations, mostly in Europe; the 301 and to a lesser extent the 401 were also exported. Production of the 301 started in 1953; the 301 was launched in 1954. The 401 was introduced in 1965 and produced until 1976.


gollark: Or just "no, you have to reinstall", although I guess different style/connotations/whatever.
gollark: You could say "apioform" or "utter apioform".
gollark: Demoting gollark is actually illegal.
gollark: I think it's roughly normally distributed.
gollark: Max Utter is a propagandist who somehow appears in all DuckDuckGo searches for apioforms and I can't work out why.

References

  • Boardman, Haden (1994). "Turning The Tables: Garrard Model 301 and 401 Transcription Motor Units ", Sound Practices.
  • Kessler, Ken (2005). "Table Talk", Garrard 301/401, Hifi News & Record Review.
  • Mortimer, E.W. (1967). "Design Of Transcription Turntables", Component Technology, Plessey Group.
  • Olson, Lynn (2005). "A Tiny History of High Fidelity", The Soul Of Sound.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.