The creators of The Rock know the importance of well-crafted speakers. Austrian companies MOSTLIKELY and mo° sound have teamed up to create a set of 3D printed speakers whose multi-sided, quasi-spherical design allows for sound quality way beyond what you’d expect from such a compact device. The design was based on three principles of sound:
- Ideal Stereo Imaging: As described by the creators, the ball-shaped speakers were designed like “an imaginary sound space, like a three-dimensional stage, on which the location of each performer can be clearly located.” This allows for a surround-sound, concert-like experience.
- Chaos Inside: It may sound like the title of an emo album, but it actually describes the sound quality produced by The Rock’s odd shape. Because the speaker is made up of many walls of differing shapes, angles, and sizes, sounds waves are less likely to crash into each other, allowing for a clearer sound.
- The Point Source: While other speakers have several sources of sound, The Rock transmits a full sound frequency from one single chassis, creating improved spatial sound.
The Rock is one of the first 3D printed products developed by MOSTLIKELY, an agency that creates everything from buildings to art installations to music videos. The spherical speakers are a variation on the porcelain ball-shaped speakers that mo° sound has been producing since 2011. 3D printing allowed the designers to have more control over the shape and density of both the inside and the outside of the speakers. With a weight of only 1kg per speaker, the size of The Rock speakers should come as a relief to anyone who remembers having to haul massive box speakers up and down the stairs for the sake of a decent sound system.
A wide range of colors are available, and delivery is expected to be in February 2016. The speakers, which were printed in PLA, have been fully designed and tested and are made on order. Have you tried out these speakers? Let us know in the Rock 3D Printed Speaker Forum on 3DPB.com.
Here’s a time-lapse video of one of the speakers being printed: