Life Style store for home entertainment and car audio products

Products - Mission

Since its foundation in 1977, Mission has been seen as one of the leading lights in the development of acoustic engineering and applying new technologies to create some of the most exciting and rewarding loudspeaker systems in every sector of the market. In 1978, Mission Electronics launched the 770 loudspeaker. This revolutionary product featured the world’s first commercial polypropylene drive unit. After this, swiftly followed the Mission 700 in 1979 - the first loudspeaker to use the now famous ’inverted driver array’. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, development continued with an emphasis on materials technology. As polymer chemistry advanced, more advanced materials and composites became available. Experiments on these materials yielded significant advances in acoustic engineering. The lighter, stronger materials more able to track small signal changes. Into the 1990s, Mission became a force to be reckoned with, the name spread internationally, and became synonymous with high quality audio around the world. As sales grew, investment in development continued to create the 75 series, the 78 series and in 2001, the ’Pilastro’ was launched. Pilastro was the result of all those years’ cumulative knowledge. Engineered without compromise, it represents an ideal in loudspeaker development - a statement product that is, without doubt, one of the finest loudspeakers in audio history. Many of the acoustic advances achieved through the Pilastro project have since been implemented in their newer loudspeaker ranges - the new E series loudspeakers all share the secrets of drive unit technology and cabinet construction from them. Through an engineering-led approach to product development, Mission remains today, a standard by which other loudspeaker companies are measured. With huge investment and with group resources that include the ability to manufacture every single component of every product, you can be sure that Mission will continue to define loudspeaker reproduction standards.

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