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TechRadar
Becky Scarrott

These speakers are what you’d find in the center of an art, molecular science and hi-fi Venn diagram and I want them

Ultrasonic Molecular Audio system on a white wall, showing multiple wall-mounted speakers connected to look like molecular structures.

  • Ultrasonic Audio's wall-mounted sound systems are four years in the making
  • The Slovenian firm has distribution agreements in 18 countries; says UK and Australia 'coming soon'
  • Prices for the H2O model start from $4,472, but you can 'design your own'

Remember in chemistry class when you learned how to draw a water molecule because it had one oxygen and two hydrogen atoms, joined together by strong polar covalent bonds?

I can still hear my science lecturer yelling "Remember! Covalent bonds are happy bonds", and 'happy' is undoubtedly what I'd be if I could install the Flora 5 (main image) and H2O (pictured below) on various feature walls in my home.

What you're looking at is Molecule, a wall-mounted, modular hi-fi sound system made by Slovenian audio specialist Ultrasonic Audio, following almost four years of research and development.

Its makers say it can consist of up to 10 active speakers and one power unit, connected in a user-defined pattern (Mother Nature not good enough for you, eh?) and the company will happily prompt you to 'design your own' on its site, which is fun. After that, you can request a quote for your creation – which might not be quite so fun.

Great chemistry

(Image credit: Ultrasonic / Molecular Audio)

The Molecule sound system is, says its creators, designed to "create a balance between visual aesthetics and high fidelity audio".

The finish materials are largely natural (copper and wood in either Slovenian walnut or American walnut) and you can choose between large speakers (depth: 108mm; diameter: 350mm; weight 3.5kg) and small speakers (depth: 108mm; diameter: 300mm; weight 3kg) as well as large and small power units, splitters and connection tubes in copper with the option of lighter or darker patina.

In addition to the Molecule power unit's two RCA connectors and a 3.5mm jack, there's also Bluetooth baked in, for simply pinging audio to your Molecules from your phone.

How much is all this going to cost, then? Well, for the relatively bijou H2O model, prices start from $4,472 (which would be around £3,270 or AU$6,382 before any duties) but there's scalability here. It's hard to overlook this system's potential to go much bigger – I'm thinking 'huge wall of sound' configurations…

I think this is called the Flora 10 (Image credit: Ultrasonic / Molecular Audio)

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