Who we are
The Swiss based company Studer is one of the leaders worldwide for professional audio. Founded by Willi Studer in 1948, over the years the company and its brand name Studer became synonymous for broadcasting and recording equipment. Today Studer is able to offer solutions for nearly every application in the field of Professional Audio.
Studer products are invented and designed in Regensdorf / Switzerland. The product range includes equipment and systems for TV / Radio Broadcast, Recording and Production Studios, or 19″ components for system applications.
Pioneering the future of the audio industry
At Studer, our philosophy is to continually strive for perfection through innovative design, Swiss engineering and in-built quality. The net result of this approach is that we provide our customers in Radio and TV broadcasting, as well as live installed sound industries with new and feature-enriched products and training. We have realised this goal through listening to you, our customers, and implementing your ideas, be they features, software or engineering-based – along with a few of our own, of course. Through this approach we have been able to provide you with the ultimate tools to reach new levels of excellence when producing programmes and shows.
Studer’s long and successful history is founded on customer service. We have never lost sight of this fact and realise that it is an important part of the Studer package when choosing to buy a Studer product. As such we are committed to continuing our traditions of combining excellent Swiss craftsmanship, well-engineered innovation and intuitive ideas, while always keeping the customer’s benefits as our main objective.
The constant evolution of ergonomic user-interface technologies, combined with leading-edge digital signal processing, has resulted in the most efficient and groundbreaking innovation, namely the ‘Vista’ series of digital mixing desks. By focussing on the human aspects of operation, a product has been created that is not only intuitive, efficient and reliable but also a pleasure to use.
As digital audio information technology develops it has enabled a higher degree of system integration. In broadcasting, the digital mixing console is no longer seen as a standalone product but as an ergonomic point of access to digital audio data in a fully integrated digital audio system. Today the OnAir 3000 and ‘SCore’ platforms provide the basis of the most flexible and networkable systems for a fully digital broadcast chain.
Key Milestones
1948 | The company “Willi Studer” was founded on January 5th, Willi Studer develops and builds oscilloscopes for high voltage labs. |
1949 | Willi Studer develops his first tape recorder and sells it under the label “Dynavox”, it becomes a real success. |
1951 | ELA AG was founded by Willi Studer and Hans Winzeler. The Revox T26 tape recorder was put on the market and the prestigious recording of the “International Music Festival Lucerne” was made with a prototype of the first professional tape recorder Studer 27. |
1952 | Mass production of the Studer 27 begins, Willi Studer has 32 employees. |
1954 | The first tape recorder of the famous Revox A36-series is put on the market. |
1955 | Willi Studer introduces the Studer A37 and Studer B37. |
1957 | Several thousand tape recorders have already been build by Studer. The company set up an international sales network. Introduction of the first portable tape recorder Studer B30. |
1958 | Studer presents the first mixing console, the portable Studer 69. |
1960 | Production start of the Studer C37 and the Revox D36. Co-operation with “EMT Wilhelm Franz GmbH” begins. |
1963 | Several new distributors join Studer to market the Swiss tape recorders in many different countries. |
1964 | The legendary Studer J37 4-track tape recorder goes into production. |
1965 | Introduction of the first fully transistorized professional tape recorder Studer A62. A total of 50,000 Revox tape recorders have been build so far. |
1966 | The first daughter-company “Willi Studer GmbH in Löffingen / Germany”, founded in 1964, starts its production with Revox C36 models. |
1967 | The “Beatles” choose the Studer J37 4-track for their album “Sergeant Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band”. Introduction of the famous Revox A77 and its counterparts (amplifier A50 and FM-tuner A76). |
1968 | 560 employees work for Studer. Introduction of the Studer 189 mixer. |
1970 | Introduction of the Studer A80, it represents an entirely new design-concept with versions from 1/8″ QC for cassette duplication up to 2″ 24-track. Willi Studer gets honored by the AES. |
1972 | Delivery of the so far biggest professional audio mixing console Studer 289 with 30 input channels to the Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG. |
1973 | The first synthesizer-tuner Studer A720 is presented. |
1975 | The business of the Studer-Revox Group has grown steadily since 1966, Studer employs 1,495 people and has bought and built several production and distribution facilities worldwide. |
1978 | Presentation of the microprocessor controlled multitrack tape recorder Studer A800. Willi Studer is awarded an honorary doctorate from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH) Zurich. |
1980 | Co-operation with SONY for standardizing PCM-formats. |
1982 | Introduction of the Studer 900-series mixing console, the Revox PR99 and the A710 cassette tape recorder. |
1983 | Introduction of the first digital products, the sampling frequency converter SFC-16 and the preview delay for disc cutting DAD-16. Strong involvement in the standardization of the DASH format. |
1985 | Very successful business year, introduction of the Studer A820 analog multitrack recorder, the A725 CD-Player and the 961/962 mixing desk series. |
1986 | The Studer Revox group employs 1882 people, including all subsidiaries worldwide. |
1989 | Studer Editech was formed following the buy-out of the American company Integrated Media Systems. Introduction of the 48-track DASH tape recorder D820. Willi Studer wants to retire, several international companies are interested to buy the Studer Revox Group. |
1990 | Willi Studer sells the Studer Revox Group to Motor-Columbus AG, including all subsidiary companies. |
1991 | Acquisition of the French audio manufacturer Digitec S.A., the new products (CAB, digital routing) supplement the Studer range. Motor-Columbus splits the Studer Revox Group into Studer (Pro), Revox (HiFi) and a Manufacturing-division. MC sells several subsidiaries and plants. |
1993 | Introduction of the all new DASH recorder Studer D827. The first digital mixing console Studer D940 is sold to the WDR Cologne. |
1994 | The extensive reorganization culminates in the sale of the Studer Group to Harman International Inc., the Revox Group was excluded and sold to a financial company. Studer is revitalized under Harman. |
1995 | The first all digital broadcast system goes on air at the Swiss National Broadcasting Company DRS Zurich (including Studer D941 on-air console, Studer MADI-router). First presentation of the D424 MO recorder. Introduction of the D19 MicAD. The DigiMedia broadcast automation is introduced to the market in ’95 as a completely new version. |
1996 | Willi Studer dies on March 1st. Presentation of the digital Studer OnAir 2000 console, the Studer D741 CD-Recorder and the Studer 928 analog mixing console as well as the MicValve and MultiDAC of the Studer D19-family. |
1997 | The all-new Studer D950 digital mixing console gains much attention at the first presentation due to its unparalleled performance and capabilities. The last of the ex-Revox-products leave production in December (B77 Mk II, PR 99 Mk III). Good success in CAB with DigiMedia and Digitec Numisys. First presentation of new software-tools like Track’Filer and Smart’Log from Studer Digitec. Introduction of the new routing equipment Studer D19m. |
1998 | Introduction of the revolutionary VirtualSurround Panning™ mixing format on the D950S and the PUMA-chip: this Studer-developed specialized high-performance DSP-chip is available in the DigaStudio controller for the DigAS software by DAVID. Studer also introduces the V-Eight, an 8 channel 20 bit digital multitrack recorder based on S-VHS cassettes. |
1999 | Studer adapts the D950 core technology to the digital D941 broadcast mixing surface which results in a very powerful and flexible broadcast desk, the Studer OnAir 5000. |
2000 | Studer launches the D950M2 with a new surface design and many more features, and also the OnAir 1000 digital mixing desk for radio broadcast and production applications, offering OnAir 2000 technology in a fixed configuration at a very attractive price. |
2001 | In 2001, after more than 600 OnAir 2000 installations, the OnAir 2000M2 enters the market – a completely reworked and improved version of the OnAir 2000 including an input router and a new attractive styling. |
2002 | At NAB 2002 in Las Vegas Studer surprises the industry with the Vista 7 digital production consoles incorporating the most advanced user interface in the market, the Vistonics Touch’n’Access concept. In the same year, at IBC in Amsterdam in the autumn, Studer launches the broadcast version of Vista, the Vista 6, together with the Vista Remote Bay, intended for theatre applications where the control needs to be in the audience. Also in autumn 2002 the OnAir 2000M2 Modulo is introduced. |
2003 | In 2003 Studer enhances its on air mixing console product range with the small fixed configuration Studer OnAir 500 and the highly flexible and modular Studer OnAir 3000. This is based a new mixing DSP core technology, the SCore and has a most modern and flexible software architecture allowing for system seamless integration and opening the way to complex networked broadcast systems. |
2004 | Studer and Soundcraft join forces under parent company Harman’s ‘Professional Division’ to develop Harman’s range of digital consoles for the future. Also in the same year, Studer launches it’s flagship console, the Vista 8. |
2006 | Studer launches the Vista 5. |
2007 | Route 6000 introduced at NAB Las Vegas. Vista 5 SR enters the Tour Sound arena. |
2008 | OnAir 2500, Studer’s new compact broadcast console debuts at NAB 2008 |
2009 | The OnAir 2500 goes modular with OnAir 2500 Modulo. |