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Behringer: Highly Rated Speakers, Stupid Hook-Up Design, and Non-Existent Customer Relations

Gary North

Oct. 24, 2009

I bought a pair of Behringer 2030P TRUTH speakers this week. At $120 a pair, they are a bargain.

Behringer: Highly Rated Speakers, Stupid Hook-Up Design, and Non-Existent Customer Relations
I use them in a 7-speaker home theater set-up, along with a pair of standing Boston Acoustic speakers that are over 20 years old. The Behringers replace a pair of ancient BA bookshelf speakers, one of which had died.

I don't know if they are great speakers or not. They are not primary speakers. But for around $100, they sound fine.

They have a minor problem. The speaker cable hook-up slots are really, truly stupid. Bonehead stupid. The slot has a vertical pole in the middle. So, you cannot insert the wire and twist down the nub. The pole forces you to squish the speaker wire around the pole. I have never seen anything this utterly stupid in 53 years of buying speakers.

Behringer: Highly Rated Speakers, Stupid Hook-Up Design, and Non-Existent Customer Relations
Then there was the registration card. It is in an Asian script. There is no address. There is no place for a stamp. Is it the registration card? I found no other card.
Behringer: Highly Rated Speakers, Stupid Hook-Up Design, and Non-Existent Customer Relations

When I went to Behringer's site to send an email with a warning, I found that there is no email option on the site. There is no customer relations department. There is no sales department. There is no webmaster-alert email. This announces: "Go away, customer. Just send us your money."

The company was started in Germany in 1989, now makes the products in China, and is headquartered in Monaco, a tiny tax haven. Its customer relations department might as well be in North Korea.

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