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The Tip is 'AmericanApparel' We've gone to great lengths finding companies offering USA made apparel, essentially creating an online made in USA store. Other ways companies describe this type of clothing: American Apparel, American Clothing, US Made Clothing, and USA clothing. No matter what their products are called, our ads display only USA made clothes like pants, shirts, jeans, t-shirts, dresses, sweatshirts, tees, tanks, shoes, sweaters, and many other things made in USA. A few of our advertisers offer non Made in USA clothing you need to be aware of that. Our website sends you directly to the USA made products offered by these companies. However, if you leave our link you may not be viewing Made in USA items. Keep your eyes open because it's easy to return to the Made in USA page, use our advertiser (company) search feature and enter Made in USA. If you use the term American Apparel, don't forget to check your spelling as it is one of the most often misspelled term. If you type in the words American Apparel incorrectly, you may not find what you are looking for. If this happens use our browse all products button and click on clothing or clothing accessories. As a point of reference, the five most common misspellings for American Apparel:
If you find an error in any of our links please contact us and we will immediately solve the problem. Your help will always be appreciated. With your assistance our fee to use site will always improve. If you know of other b2c clothing manufacturers that you would like to see on our site let us know and we will contact them. Our goal is to have the best selection of USA made apparel that is easily found on internet. Buying Tip Continued - Read more on Made in America Products by Human Speakers EPI was founded in 1970 by Winslow Burhoe, to manufacture speakers based on the module he had designed. This module consisted of an eight inch woofer and a one inch tweeter. Many different speakers were built using various combinations of this module, and a six inch version of the woofer. They were wonderful speakers and are still usually prized by their owners, who will frequently go to great lengths to repair them properly when they (rarely) develop problems. As time went by market forces demanded new and improved product lines and more a modern look to the product (and the promotional literature...) and so what I call the intermediate line was rolled out. Some of these speakers were essentially the same as previous models, but they all had an updated look. These speakers carried an A prefix to their model numbers, all that is except the venerable 100, which had the new look but not the new name. The A300 and A500 were introduced, and were actually quite different from previous EPI speakers. By the late seventies the market was requesting its usual superficial changes in order to have something to talk about, and so the EPI line was overhauled again, more radically, to create the Time/Energy speakers. The new woofers were similar to the older ones, except the cones were a very interesting laminate. A clear Lexan body was glued to the foam from the surround which extended behind it almost to the apex where the voice coil attaches. The tweeters used with these woofers were polycarbonate dome tweeters which sounded pretty good, but if driven hard sometimes actually melted a circle in the dome where the voice coil would heat up. In the eighties the Magnus line was produced with 10 and 12 woofers and several different various cone and horn midranges and tweeters. Marketed to a different segment of buyers than the previous lines, these speakers have a fairly impressive sound, given the growing cost limitations of the market and the imaging drawbacks to using larger diameter woofers in general. There were also a couple of other series of speakers produced - the Epicure 1 through 5, which were pretty interesting speakers, though they to bear little resemblance to the older speakers, and the EPI model 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0. These were quite impressive speakers, enjoying a lot of the strengths of the traditional EPI/epicure engineering while incorporating a number of subtle improvements in their design, most notable the truncated pyramid of the 3.0 cabinet, with the tweeter mounted in free space on the top. I have managed to give a few speakers short shrift here, maybe I will write more in the future about the Stat 450, the microtowers, and the car speakers. For now this will have to do. As the years went by, even though the speakers were still good, there was a more corporate look and feel to the product lines. This culminated in the early nineties when home entertainment giant Harman International bought the trademark and the remaining inventory, tucking them into an office next to JBL in Woodbridge, NY. Harman built several inexpensive speakers with the EPI label, which I believe have been discontinued at this point. I specialize in building parts for the older speakers. I have many, many of the parts required to repair the later lines. I can answer a lot of questions and help you (I hope) with problems or mysteries relating to most of the models - feel free to contact me. |
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