MoFi Electronics - Now at Paragon

MoFi Electronics - Now at Paragon

Aug 13, 2017

Drawing on five decades of making the world’s best-sounding records at Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab studios, MoFi Electronics focuses on improving the sonic integrity of home-audio reproduction. Each product is the result of collaboration with some of the industry’s finest engineers and stems from years of studio experience. MoFi's turntables, cartridges, and phono preamplifiers are designed to spotlight what Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab continues to do with its famous Original Master Recordings: Getting you closer to what the original artist intended.

MOBILE FIDELITY TURNTABLES

Designed in collaboration with one of the world's foremost turntable and tonearm designers, Allen Perkins of Spiral Groove, and manufactured in Ann Arbor, Michigan, Mobile Fidelity turntables provide uncompromising playback of your vinyl collection and maintain the high standards of Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab. Advanced technology, user-friendly features, and unflappable design elements ensure phenomenal playback—ultimately bringing the sound of Mobile Fidelity’s famous studio into your home.

MOBILE FIDELITY CARTRIDGES

Designed in collaboration with Allen Perkins, Mobile Fidelity’s Japan-built phono cartridges follow the same layout as the cutting head responsible for making the grooves on vinyl LPs. Each boasts superb tracking sense, tremendous accuracy, and coloration-free performance. MoFi cartridges use a V-Twin dual-magnet generator that mirrors the design of a lathe’s stereo cutter head. Two powerful low-mass magnets are carefully aligned in parallel with the stereo record grooves to achieve excellent channel separation and detail retrieval true to the Original Master Recording.

MOBILE FIDELITY PHONOSTAGES

Developed by revered engineer Tim De Paravicini, the USA-made StudioPhono and UltraPhono prize simplicity, purity, precision, and control—the very characteristics responsible for producing audiophile clarity, unstinting accuracy, and breathtaking realism during analog playback.