The company was founded by the Yorkshire-born engineer Guy Fountain (1898-1977) at a garage in Tulsemere Road, Dulwich in London as the Tulsemere Manufacturing Company. It originally made battery chargers for wireless radio sets.[2] The company name was changed to Tannoy in 1928 and a small factory was opened in Dalton Road, West Norwood, later moving to Canterbury Grove. Tannoy Square SE27 commemorates the site today.[3]
During World War II Tannoy public address systems were supplied to the armed forces, and a Tannoy PA system was used at Buckingham Palace in 1945 to announce the end of hostilities.[3] Tannoy speakers were also supplied to factories around Britain to relay the BBC's motivational radio series Music While You Work,[4] and to Butlins and Pontinsholiday camps following the war - where they were famously used to waken guests with the words "Good morning, campers!".[3] The Tannoy factory moved from Canterbury Grove to Coatbridge, Scotland in the 1970s.
In 2002, Tannoy was acquired by TC Group, and TC Group was subsequently acquired by Music Group in 2015. Following the Music Group acquisition, it was suggested that the Coatbridge facility would be closed and all related activities would be relocated to Manchester, England.[5] In 2016, however, Music Group confirmed that Tannoy loudspeaker manufacturing would continue in Scotland, with a brand new manufacturing facility planned.[6]
Brand name
The name Tannoy is a syllabic abbreviation of tantalumalloy, which was the material used in a type of electrolyticrectifier developed by the company. The brand was trademarked by 10 March 1932, on which date the Tulsemere Manufacturing Company formally registered as Guy R. Fountain Limited.[7]
Tannoy became a household name due to widespread and high profile adoption during and after the war, each speaker having the Tannoy logo prominently displayed on the speaker grills. As a result, the term "tannoy" came to be used in British English for any public-address system, and as a verb, to "tannoy", for making an announcement in a public place.[8][9][10] That is, although Tannoy is a registered trademark, as of 2019[update], it is still often used generically.[11][12][13] Because of this, the company's intellectual property department keeps a close eye on the media. To preserve its trademark, it often notifies publications not to use its trade name without a capital letter, or as a generic term for a PA system.
Products
Tannoy's image is particularly linked to both studio monitors as well as its flagship Prestige range of home speakers. Prestige speakers use Dual Concentric cone speakers and are easily recognisable by their "vintage" design. Tannoy is notable for its 'Dual Concentric' speaker design, which places the tweeter behind the centre of the medium or bass driver. "Dual Concentric" is a trademark although Tannoy is not the only speaker manufacturer to design coaxial speakers.
Home and Studio speakers:
Cheviot Series
Reveal Series (Made in China)
Plus Series
70Anniversary Series
Surrey Series
Gold Series
Definition Series
Eclipse Series
Mercury Series
Prestige Series
Classic Monitor
K3838 monitor kit (similar to Classic Monitor)
Super Red Monitor
K3808 monitor kit (similar to Super Red Monitor)
Little Red
Sixes Series
Profile Series
Precision Series
Revolution Series
Dimension Series
Eyris Series
Arena 5.1
Cabinets:
Lancaster
System DMT
PA Systems:
Wildcats (1984)
CPA Series (1990)
T & I Series (1998)
B Series (1998)
V Series (2002)
VS Series (2003)
IQ Series (2004)
VQ & VQNET Series (2009)
VX & VXP Series (2011)
VSX Series (2012)
VSXNET (2015)
Further reading
Alderton, Julian (2004). The Tannoy Story. Edward Gaskell. ISBN1-898546-58-4.
^A definition of "tannoy" was first included in the Oxford English Dictionary in 1946 as ‘a communications system with loudspeakers, used for
making announcements in public buildings.’
^"Tannoy", Longman Dictionary of Current English online, 14 March 2012
^BBC World Service broadcast 27 February 2010 referring to the use of "Tannoys" in warning seaside dwellers to evacuate to higher ground due to a possible tsunami caused by the Chilean earthquake of that day (heard on WNYC FM)