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Is that your vinyl answer? Old LPs turned into iPhone speakers

By ROB WAUGH

Last updated at 7:14 PM on 16th September 2011

With MP3s ruling the music industry, and CDs almost a thing of the past, most vinyl records are probably gathering dust in middle-aged men's attics.

But not for designer Paul Cocksedge, who transforms the 'dead' music format into speakers for smartphones such as iPhone - 'horn'-style speakers of the sort that used to be used on 78rpm record players.

‘The miniaturisation of technology means that speakers aren’t what they used to be - they need volume, they need to be bigger,’ said Cocksedge.

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Designer Paul Cocksedge has finally found a use for all those old records in your attics - he melts them into £25 'horn' speakers to amplify iPhone's built-in sounds

Cocksedge applies heat to the vinyl record until it softens, then moulds it into the perfect shape needed to amplify noise - so no electricity or power is needed.

He will be creating speakers 'live' from his customers' own records at London's Design Festival. For £25, audience members can bring in their own records and watch them being converted into a unique funnel-shaped speaker for their smartphone.

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'We’re mixing the sound from the past with the sound of the new,’ Cocksedge said.

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The designer applies a gentle heat to the record until it 'melts' enough to become pliable, then moulds it into a speaker

The live event will be held on 20th September at Concrete, underneath a pizzeria on Shoreditch High Street. ‘So they’ll be cooking pizzas upstairs while we’re cooking records downstairs,’ laughed Cocksedge.

It is part of the London Design Festival, which runs from 17th-25th September, and will see the city transformed by the country’s leading designers and architects.

The entrance to the V&A will be surrounded by a giant 12m timber wave by architects AL_A, while at St Paul’s Cathedral, designer John Pawson has engineered an optical illusion that will allow visitors to see as if looking down from the top of the tower - while still firmly on the ground.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2038226/Is-vinyl-answer-Old-LPs-turned-iPhone-speakers.html

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2038226/Is-vinyl-answer-Old-LPs-turned-iPhone-speakers.html#ixzz1YSP0xDD1

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2038226/Is-vinyl-answer-Old-LPs-turned-iPhone-speakers.html#ixzz1YSP0xDD1

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