Analogplanet Visits Audio-Technica Headquarters, Machida, Japan
The company’s first two products were the AT-1 and AT-3 moving magnet cartridges. Six years later Audio-Technica began researching and developing high quality headphones, which it began marketing and distributing in 1974.
A-T soon added professional and consumer grade microphones to its product range and in the mid 1980s it commercialized Pure Copper by Ohno Continuous Casting (PCOCC) copper by using it for phono cartridge coils.
Despite the “near death” of vinyl LPs, Audio-Technica continues to manufacture a full line of phono cartridges while expanding its product line of headphones, microphones, food machinery and other products. Audio-Technica has provided microphones for many Olympic Games and will do so again for the 2016 games in Rio.
Today half of the company’s business is in headphones (the best selling brand in Japan for the past seven years), approximately twenty five percent is in microphones, while the rest covers AV accessories, mixers/amps and speakers, food processing equipment, dust prevention gear for industrial use, semiconductor lasers and optical pickups and of course, phono cartridges, most of which are manufactured in Audio-Technica’s Fukui, Japan factory.
The new headquarters shown in this video, is the home of the company’s research and development laboratories including anechoic and RF chambers.
It also houses part of founder Hideo Matsushita’s extensive collection of antique acoustic phonographs as well as part of his collection of art including works of Picasso and other well-known artists.
Manufacturing of microphones and other products is done at a Machida factory, which is also where Audio-Technica’s new ART 1000 cartridge is manufactured.