'Henry Kloss' (
1929,
Altoona, PA–
January 31,
2002,
Cambridge, MA) was a prominent
audio engineer and businessman who helped advance
high fidelity loudspeaker and
radio receiver technology beginning in the
1950s. Kloss (rhymes with gross) was a student in
physics at
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (class of 1953), but never received a degree. He was responsible for a number of innovations, including the
acoustic suspension loudspeaker and the high fidelity
cassette deck. In
2000, Kloss was one of the first inductees into the
Consumer Electronics Association's Hall of Fame. He earned an
Emmy Award for his development of a
projection television system, the Advent Video Beam 1000.
Career
During the course of his career, Kloss founded or co-founded several significant audio equipment manufacturing companies.
Acoustic Research
He co-founded
Acoustic Research Corporation (AR) with
Edgar Villchur in
1954. Villchur, a former teacher of Kloss, had conceived a novel way of building an accurate loudspeaker. Together they developed the AR Model 1, which changed the way that speakers were designed. Until then, speakers of quality had to be quite large. By using an enclosure with a sealed air cavity behind the speaker cone which acted as a
spring to damp
woofer motion, they were able to make less-expensive, bookshelf-size speakers. Although they were inefficient in power consumption compared to ported designs, they had extremely low distortion. The AR-1 was the first commercial acoustic suspension loudspeaker.
KLH

A KLH Model Eight FM table radio.
Kloss began his custom of
eponymous products by lending his last name's initial to
KLH as a founder in
1957, along with Malcolm Low and J. Anton Hofmann (son of pianist
Józef Hofmann) who had also been investors in AR. There Kloss continued to build speakers such as the classic KLH Model Six and produced one of the first small
FM radios with high
selectivity, the Model Eight. He also created the first
solid state record player, the KLH Model Eleven. In
1968, he collaborated with
Ray Dolby of
Dolby Laboratories to develop the B version of the
Dolby noise reduction system to reduce tape hiss. This resulted in the KLH Model Forty reel-to-reel tape recorder, Dolby's first foray into the consumer product market.
Advent Corporation

An advent Dolby noise reduction unit.
Kloss founded 'Advent Corporation' in
1967. The name came from the legal description ''the advent corporation'' ("advent" means ''approaching'' in
Latin) used in the
incorporation documents before the actual name is selected. The original goal had been to develop a projection television, but by
1969 he had quit KLH to build a remarkable dual driver speaker system with 10 inch (25 cm) woofer called simply ''The Advent Loudspeaker'' (later colloquially called the ''Large Advent'' after introduction of ''The Smaller Advent Loudspeaker''). It rivaled the sound of the then top-line AR Model 3a (which used three drivers and a 12 inch (30 cm) woofer), but only cost about half as much. He then went to work on increasing the fidelity of
cassette tapes, a format that had originally been meant to be used only for
dictation. Kloss introduced the Advent 201 in
1971, incorporating Dolby B along with
chromium dioxide tape on a
Wollensak tape drive to create the first high fidelity
cassette deck.
The Advent Video Beam 1000 was finally released in
1972, the first large screen projection television for home use. This led to founding
Kloss Video Corporation in
1977. He invented the
Novatron tube there, which increased the efficiency of projection TVs.
Eventually, long after Kloss’ departure, Advent ran into hard times and never emerged from a bankruptcy declared in March of 1981. Kloss’ own Video Corporation passed on reacquiring the New Hampshire based brand, which was later merged into International Jensen.
Cambridge SoundWorks
Cambridge SoundWorks was founded in
1988. That company was quite successful, producing dozens of different models ranging from the ever-present
table radio of Kloss's companies to high quality speaker systems for
computers. It is now a subsidiary of
Creative Technology.
Tivoli Audio
Kloss briefly went into retirement in the late
1990s, but soon found himself co-founding another company,
Tivoli Audio, with long-time associate and former
Cambridge SoundWorks co-founder
Tom DeVesto. There, he made the Model One (
mono) and Model Two (
stereo) table radios using
MESFET technology to increase selectivity. The high-quality
tuner combined with a good speaker arrangement led some reviewers to call these radios "
Bose killers." However, the Cambridge SoundWorks Model 88 had used some similar technology, leading to a lawsuit between Cambridge and Tivoli Audio.
Kloss continued to work on other projects until his death in 2002 of a
subdural hematoma.
References
★
Cambridge Soundworks Memoriam and Timeline
★
Stereophile Obituary
★ Wes Phillips (2002)
Henry Kloss: The Man Who Changed Audio and Video OnHiFi.com
★
CE Hall of Fame: Henry Kloss. Consumer Electronics Association.
★
About Tivoli Audio. Tivoli Audio.
★
About KLH. KLH.
External links
★
KLH
★
Audiovox (current owners of Acoustic Research and Advent brands)
★
Cambridge SoundWorks
★
Tivoli Audio
★
Eaton's Advent Page
★
More information about Kloss' famous Model Eight table radio.