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Field Coil Speakers
If you’re looking for loudspeakers that let you connect with music on the deepest emotional level, you simply can’t ignore field-coil designs. Field-coil drivers don’t use permanent magnets but electromagnets - a technology found in early cinema loudspeakers from companies like Western Electric and Klangfilm.
If you’re looking for loudspeakers that let you connect with music on the deepest emotional level, you simply can’t ignore field-coil designs. Field-coil drivers don’t use permanent magnets but electromagnets—a technology found in early cinema loudspeakers from companies like Western Electric and Klangfilm.
Despite their outstanding acoustic qualities, field-coil systems were largely abandoned after the Second World War. From both economic and practical perspectives, permanent-magnet designs offered clear advantages: lower production costs, easier manufacturing, and no need for an external power supply, to name just a few. As with other technologies that were replaced by “ersatz” mass-market products—despite their clear sonic superiority (analogue media, tube amplification, and so on)—we’re now seeing certain audio manufacturers returning to these older approaches.
Canvas of Tranquility
Audiophiles are, in fact, a rather peculiar species. Whether what we experience is imagination or reality hardly matters—we often set out on a path where the forest behind us immediately closes in, a path that leads us ever closer to, what we believe is the Musical Truth. These paths are usually costly, yet once taken, there is “simply no way back” as the expression goes.
The path of field-coil loudspeakers is no exception. A field-coil speaker operates beyond the usual parameters by which loudspeakers are judged—frequency response, dynamic behaviour, resolution of detail, spatial rendering, and so on.
In my personal experience, these speakers are not more dynamic than a conventional loudspeaker, nor do they have a wider range or offer more detail, however, they cast a different kind of light on the reproduction, and that is what makes them so captivating. Without getting into the physical or engineering explanations for why they sound the way they do, field-coil loudspeakers seem to create a deeper sense of tranquility. This isn’t about silence in the usual sense—not the absence of noise or a lower noise floor—but a psychoacoustic quietness. It’s as if they provide a calmer inner canvas on which the music can form itself more vividly and more truthfully. Our brain appears to process their sound in a more natural, unforced manner than with conventional loudspeakers. Instead of decoding the music, you simply receive it; the presentation feels effortless, coherent, and complete.
To put it in Barthes’ terms[1]: when listened to through field-coil speakers, the music is not merely experienced as studium, but very often as punctum—the music penetrates the listener, grabs him, reveals tensions that are unusually intriguing. A cello does not merely sound like a cello; you can feel the tension of the strings as the bow draws across them. The strike of a piano note contains an emotional shadow that seizes the listener. With such listening experiences there is simply no way back. The path behind us is dark; the Truth lies ahead.
[1] Barthes Roland, Camera Lucida, Reflections on Photography, translated by Richard Howard. New York: Hill and Wang, 1981.
If you have the chance to attend the annual High-End Fair—held in Vienna from 2026 onward—make sure to listen to the old Western Electric cinema system that is on show every year. There you can experience a nearly century-old field-coil setup that will make you question how much progress has been made in audio technology over the past hundred years.
A tip: save this for the end of your visit, not the beginning. The danger is that this 90-year-old system may prevent you from enjoying anything more modern.
Some more background information offered by Audio Note [2]
“Field coil drive units, or in laymen’s terms, powered drive units, using an electromagnet to generate the magnetic field with which the voice coil interacts (by Lorentz Force), date from the earliest days of electrical music reproduction. At the time, not long after the turn of the 20th century, permanent magnet technology was not sufficiently advanced to make a conveniently sized, and priced, speaker drive unit.
Electrical efficiency was much less of a consideration then, and there was often a ‘free’ source of power for the field coil – by using the speaker field coil as the smoothing choke in the device’s power supply.
Now, the question arises as to why revisit an older, now largely redundant technology?
That is because of the sound. The effect is not that there is more in terms of quantity from the speakers, there isn’t, there’s actually less. They sound calmer, more relaxed and graceful, yet there is now more information – in terms of tonality, subtle inflection, and atmosphere. What was previously obscured is now revealed. The scales have fallen from your ears!”
[2] https://www.audionote.co.uk/e-ltd-speakers
Delve into Audio Note (UK)’s designer-in-chief Andy Grove’s full article for further insight into the design and construction of the AN-E Ltd. Field Coil speakers.
Currently, we have the following field-coil speakers on offer at Walden.
Audio Note AN-E Ltd. Series
The AN-E is, in terms of dimensions, the largest loudspeaker Audio Note manufactures. It is essentially a Peter Snell design that has been refined to an exceptional degree over the years. The speaker is a simple two-way built with high-quality components. The field-coil versions of this remarkable loudspeaker occupy the upper tier of the range. The AN-E SPx Ltd. is the entry point into the field-coil lineup and uses internal Audio Note SPx silver wiring and built-in crossover filters. Higher up in the range, Audio Note employs silver wiring with even greater strand counts (SOGON and SOOTTO), along with external crossovers fitted with more advanced components—copper-foil or silver-foil capacitors, silver inductors, and so on. [3]
[3] For an overview of the Audio Note products, including the speaker range, check out our Audio Note brand page.
The AN-E SPx Ltd. has already received outstanding reviews and is praised for its resolving power and nuance—qualities that are unique to field-coil loudspeakers. Ken Micallef (Stereophile) concludes:
“This is music playback of extraordinary beauty, a near-supernatural experience that left me dumbstruck and humbled.”[4]
[4] Ken Micallef, Audio Note AN-E/SPx Ltd. Field Coil loudspeaker, Stereophile, June 26, 2025.
Reviews of the AN-E Ltd. Speakers
Supravox Alizee
Supravox—and its predecessor—has been manufacturing field-coil loudspeakers since the 1930s, and may well represent the oldest continuous production of field-coil loudspeakers in the world. All Supravox drivers feature exponentially curved paper cones that have been carefully developed over more than half a century for their exceptional sonic character. Supravox also manufactures complete loudspeaker systems.
The current Supravox team combines the knowledge and experience gained through decades of development with the tools of modern technology. FEMM modelling, Klippel measurements, and CAD/CAM/CNC manufacturing are brought together with a high degree of musical sensitivity and historical awareness.
Dedicated to advancing the standard of sound reproduction, each driver is individually measured and supplied with its own Thiele/Small parameters. Stereo pairs are then matched. This level of quality control ensures that the published data represents the minimum performance Supravox products are capable of—a degree of dedication and transparency that remains unmatched in the industry.
If you’re into DIY loudspeaker projects, Supravox is certainly a brand that deserves a place on your radar. Supravox produces some of the finest field-coil drivers in the industry, backed by a long-standing legacy and deep expertise.
Tonapparate Model 55
Tonapparate is a German brand that develops high-efficiency loudspeakers, inspired to a considerable extent by the designs and technologies of Western Electric and Klangfilm. These speakers are artisanal masterpieces built with meticulous attention to the smallest details.
Sonically, they are truly unique — combining fantastic dynamic capability with a finesse that most modern loudspeaker designs simply lack. The Model 55 uses an 11-inch field-coil driver coupled with a Western Electric–type WE32 horn cast entirely from bronze, along with a 1-inch compression driver on the horn.
The Model 55 is a modern re-imagining of the classic Western Electric 753C from the 1950s — although the original already used a permanent-magnet system at the time.
The sound of the Model 55 is unlike anything I’ve ever heard. It offers a calmness and nuance that are genuinely extraordinary. Listening to it is such a unique and addictive experience that it seems to alter one’s perception of time. This is not an exaggeration — it feels like a time machine, capable of warping time.
Review Tonapparate Model 55
The Tonapparate Model 55 in action

