Bowers & Wilkins 800 D3

800 D3 Reference quality sound/ Bowers & Wilkins 800 D3 sets a new standard for audio performance /As the flagship model of the new 800 Series Diamond

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Bowers & Wilkins 800 D3

Discontinued

Redefining reference quality sound

Bowers & Wilkins 800 D3 sets a new standard for audio performance

As the flagship model of the new 800 Series Diamond range, the 800 D3 takes the innovative, ground-breaking technologies developed for the new series to the ultimate conclusion.

800 D3

The result is the best loudspeaker Bowers & Wilkins has ever produced.

The new Bowers & Wilkins 800 D3 loudspeaker redefines reference quality sound.

It is the best performing, most advanced loudspeaker the brand has yet produced and is a fitting announcement on the eve of Bowers & Wilkins 50th anniversary; taking the company closer than ever to John Bowers’ stated goal of True Sound.

When the new 800 Series Diamond launched late last year, the range redefined performance standards, both for the 800 Series itself and for the wider world of premium loudspeakers.

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The result of an intensive seven-year project to make the best better, the 800 Series Diamond is a combination of tireless research and development, advanced engineering, and countless hours of listening by the very best ears in the business. And with the launch of the range’s flagship 800 D3, the bar has been raised once again.

The most immediate visual differences between the new 800 D3 and the 802 D3 is the size of the new speaker’s low frequency enclosure and is twin bass drivers.

The 800 D3 features two 10inch Aerofoil bass drivers, as opposed to the two 8inch drivers on the slightly smaller 802 D3.

However, the bass drivers are not only larger: they also utilise a unique carbon fibre construction for an even stiffer, more pistonic cone and are optimised for linearity and low distortion

The drivers also benefit from a higher specification motor assembly with upgraded magnets for increased control and crossover improvements that offer a considerable upgrade over the 802 D3 in terms of performance.

The Aerofoil drivers’ dust caps are an enhanced version of the component found on the 802 D3 and 803 D3 and are formed from a sandwich construction consisting of carbon fibre and the same syntactic foam as the Aerofoil cone itself.

This further reduces dust-cap resonances and is one of the many apparently minor developments and tweaks that represent the incredible attention to detail on the no-stone unturned 800 D3.

Elsewhere, the 800 D3 deploys the same size Continuum come, Turbine head and solid-body tweeter assembly as the 802 D3. However, improved crossovers and capacitors combine to raise the level of these vital areas in order to better match the 800 D3’s excellent bass performance.

Even with all these changes, the 800 D3 sports a similar load and sensitivity to the 802 D3.

These innovations, when teamed with improvements to a series as a whole, such as dramatically stiffer cabinets, a more robust Matrix bracing system that involves thicker slats, and the thoughtful application of aluminium and steel bracing where it is more required, means the new 800 D3 represents the nirvana of reference quality sound.

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Obviously there is more bass weight on offer, but the key acoustic character of the new 800 D3 is both its effortlessness and accuracy. There are incredibly insightful levels of accuracy in the bass output and when compared to the already outstanding 802 D3, low frequency drive unit distortion is 10dB less.

There’s also a dramatically improved sense of scale when compared to the outgoing 800 Diamond, and the 800 D3 is capable of effortlessly rendering a full-size symphony orchestra in all its glory. This is thanks to the extra scale that is available and the improved knitting together of the four drive units, plus the extra resolution and detail that these new drive unit technologies deliver not only in the 800 D3, but across the entire 800 Series Diamond.

Testament to Bowers & Wilkins desire to consistently produce class-leading loudspeakers, the state-of-the-art manufacturing plant in Worthing, West Sussex, was redesigned specifically for production of the new 800 Series Diamond.

The 800 D3 is completely manufactured in the updated facility alongside the rest of the 800 Series range.

The end result of these years of work, tireless attention to detail and significant commercial expenditure is not only a worthy flagship for an exceptional range of loudspeakers, but also the very best loudspeaker that Bowers & Wilkins has ever produced.

The new 800 D3 is also an evocative reminder of the way the passion and drive of John Bowers is still alive and well in the company he founded 50 years ago.

Technologies 800 D3

Aerofoil cone

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Sometimes, new technologies allow us to achieve things in engineering that wouldn’t have been possible a few years ago.

The Aerofoil bass cone is a perfect example. By using advanced computer modelling and a new syntactic core material, they have been able to produce a cone of varying thickness, with maximum stiffness where it’s needed most.

This optimised shape means the cone displays pistonic behaviour further up the audible range, producing bass that’s precise, controlled and utterly lifelike.

Turbine head

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Hear the sound, not the cabinet. That’s the principle behind their separate head units – a feature they introduced when they launched the first 800 Series speaker in 1979.

Now, thanks to a radical redesign, the 800 Series Diamond head unit performs better than ever.

Constructed from a single piece of aluminium, braced with internal radial fins and with a raised, slimmer profile, the turbine head is almost totally inert, producing a sound that’s free from cabinet coloration.

Solid body tweeter

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Vibration is the enemy of good sound.

To minimise vibrations, you need components that are as stiff as possible. For the 800 Series Diamond, they created their stiffest tweeter enclosure yet.

The tweeter assembly for the new range is housed in a solid piece of aluminium, while an improved gel decoupling system isolates the tweeter from the effects of cabinet resonance.

The result? Pin-sharp acoustic detail, and new levels of insight into a musical performance.

Continuum cone

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For decades, they thought that nothing could beat Kevlar® as a midrange cone material. But now, following eight years of intensive development, they have finally come up with something even better. Thanks to its composite construction, the Continuum cone avoids the abrupt transitions in behaviour that can impair the performance of a conventional drive unit.

The result is a more open, neutral performance. And a giant leap forward for loudspeaker design.

Thanks to computer modelling, the design of the 800 Series Diamond midrange chassis has been completely overhauled. The new chassis is engineered for superior stiffness, while tuned-mass dampers help to reduce unwanted vibrations to a bare minimum.

Reverse wrap cabinet

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When it came to designing the ideal shape for the 800 Series Diamond cabinet, they did a U-turn. Quite literally. Instead of a flat-fronted speaker with a curving back, they produced a cabinet with a front and sides formed of one continuous curve, held together with a spine of solid aluminium.

Fewer joins make for a stiffer, more inert structure, and a curved front means less baffling around the drive units. So sound dispersion is improved, and cabinet reflection is reduced.

Matrix

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Matrix provides the backbone for their speakers. It’s an internal structure that works like the bracing of a ship’s hull, with criss-crossed interlocking panels keeping their cabinets rigid and inert.

For the 800 Series Diamond, they have introduced their most radical rethink of the Matrix concept yet. The internal panels are thicker, solid plywood has replaced MDF, and metal components have been added to reinforce key stress points. All together it’s the most solid Matrix system they have ever built.

Plinth

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A great speaker needs a rock-solid foundation. By moving the crossover from the plinth to the main body of the speaker, they have been able to create a base for the 800 Series Diamond that’s more stable and resonance-resistant than ever. Replacing the original open-box design, the new plinth is constructed from a solid piece of aluminium. This improves stability by lowering the centre of mass and counter-balancing the weight of the turbine head.

The base of larger 800 D3 is fitted with castors to allow you to manoeuvre your speakers into position easily.

Replacing these castors with floor spikes used to be a tricky proposition, involving tipping your speaker on its side. Not so with new 800 Series Diamond speakers, which come with integrated floor spikes that can be lowered or raised with a simple twist of a cog.

Diamond domes

Some things don’t change. While almost every component of the 800 Series Diamond has been reinvented, the element that gave the range its name remains unchanged: the speaker’s diamond tweeter domes. Their diamond domes remain the ultimate in tweeter technology, capable of unrivalled acoustic detail, naturalism and spaciousness.

Diamond: the super-material

The properties of diamond are prized in highly specialised industrial applications, from neurosurgery to CERN’s Large Hadron Collider. Its unique stiffness-to-lightness ratio also makes diamond the perfect tweeter material.

Developed especially for the 800 Series Diamond, diamond tweeter domes push the break-up frequency threshold to a remarkable 70kHz, resulting in superb clarity and detail.

Making diamond the natural way takes seismic pressures, volcanic temperatures and around two billion years.

Thankfully, science has found a way to shortcut the process. Using chemical vapour deposition, their diamond domes are grown like crystals in super-heated furnaces under laboratory conditions, before being cut to produce the perfect tweeter dome shape.

The 800 D3 is available now

Finishes available in Piano Gloss Black, Satin White and Rosenut

 

Additional information

Colour

Gloss Black, Rosenut, White

Brand

Bowers & Wilkins

Bowers & Wilkins

1960s: Humble beginnings

The sleepy coastal town of Worthing in South England might not look like a hotbed of 1960s freewheeling experimentation, but for audio fans it’s a place that’s synonymous with innovation. Thanks to the first Bowers & Wilkins speakers built here in the early years of the company, music lovers could experience albums such as Sgt. Pepper and Pet Sounds in new, mind-expanding depth and clarity

1966: Beginings

John Bowers begins assembling speaker systems in the workshop of his electronics shop in Worthing, South East England Following an inheritance of £10,000 from a satisfied customer, John Bowers sets up his own loudspeaker company

1966: P1

The first Bowers & Wilkins loudspeaker. The profit from P1 allowed the company to invest in new calibration equipment

1968: Domestic Monitors

The DM1 and DM3 were launched to bring high quality audio to more customers, at an affordable price point

1970s: A decade of milestones

With the company established and growing fast, Bowers & Wilkins developed its reputation for innovative design backed up by world-leading R&D. They introduced new forms and design concepts including Tweeter-on-Top, new cone materials such as Aramid fibre, and it all culminated in the launch of the iconic 801, soon to become the reference speaker of choice for many of the world’s leading recording studios

1970: DM70

With its curved cabinet, the DM70 changed the shape of loudspeaker design

1980s: The application of science

Extensive investment in research led to the establishment of the company’s dedicated R&D facility in Steyning. The era of MTV pop superstardom and bombastic stadium rock also saw Bowers & Wilkins buck the trend and introduce something small and unobtrusive: the “compact monitor”, or CM1

1990s: Rewriting the rulebook

The 1990s saw the pioneering work of the Steyning research team realised in spectacular fashion with the launch of Nautilus™, a speaker that rewrote preconceived notions of speaker design. It also saw major product launches at both ends of the spectrum, with the unveiling of the highly regarded entry-level 600 Series and the flagship Nautilus 800 Series

2000s: Expansion in to new categories

The decade that brought us iPods and smartphones saw them embrace the new world with the launch of the iconic Zeppelin. They also expanded into the car audio category and transformed the performance of their 800 Series with the development of the Diamond-dome tweeter

2015: 800 Series Diamond

The latest version of their flagship introduced a complete redesign and revolutionary new technologies, such as the Continuum™ cone

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