RIP Jeff Bagby

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jsalk

RIP Jeff Bagby
« on: 25 Mar 2020, 06:44 pm »
I met Jeff at a DIY event back in 2002.  We brought a pair of our original HT1's and Jeff was excited to see a ribbon tweeter in a pair of speakers.  We struck up a conversation that lasted most of that afternoon and we've been friends ever since.

In the years that followed, we worked with Jeff on numerous speaker designs including the original HTS home theater systems, the Pharos and the Archos designs.  They were all first rate due to Jeff's efforts. Today, you can find the Bagby Continuum design on our web site.  Jeff has always been helpful and never asked for anything in return.  He just loved working on speaker projects.  it was one of the more enjoyable things in his life.



Jeff was a chief engineer at Chrysler's transmission plant in Kokomo, Indiana.  He was the only engineer there with no engineering background.  Jeff was a math genius.  And his true love was speaker design.  I think if Jeff had had a chance to work full-time in audio, he would have been in heaven.



He designed (and made available for free) math-heavy speaker design software we still use in our operations.

Over the years, I have spent quite a bit of time with Jeff and always found him to be a positive, energetic person.  He was deeply religious and the consummate family man.

Yesterday, Jeff passed away after fighting a losing battle with coronavirus.  With all that is going on right now, this really hit home with us.

We'll miss you Jeff...

- Jim

Ace Deprave

Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #1 on: 25 Mar 2020, 08:52 pm »
So very sad. I'm sorry for the loss of your friend, Jim.

Rest in Peace, Jeff.

JonnyFive

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Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #2 on: 25 Mar 2020, 10:41 pm »
So sad to hear this news, Jeff was an incredible contributor to the audio community.  He will be missed.

wushuliu

Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #3 on: 25 Mar 2020, 11:20 pm »
Oh my God. No.

No.

F*ck.

funkmonkey

Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #4 on: 26 Mar 2020, 02:48 am »
So very sorry to hear that. Sincere condolences...

JerryM

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Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #5 on: 26 Mar 2020, 04:37 am »
So very sad to hear. Jeff did so much for us.  :cry:

Here's just a sample: Jeff Bagby's Loudspeaker Software page

Rest in peace, Jeff.

DEP14

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Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #6 on: 26 Mar 2020, 12:44 pm »
I'm sorry to hear that and sorry for the loss of your friend.

ArthurDent

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Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #7 on: 26 Mar 2020, 08:25 pm »
Sad news. Sympathies to his family, and yours on the loss of a good friend.

benguin

Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #8 on: 27 Mar 2020, 04:34 pm »
So sorry to hear of the loss of Jeff.  This is going to be a very rough patch for quite a while for many families and friends.

tonyptony

Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #9 on: 27 Mar 2020, 10:55 pm »
So sorry to hear this. :cry:

Peter J

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Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #10 on: 27 Mar 2020, 11:09 pm »
This is sad news. I didn't know Jeff, but his legacy will live on in the DIY speaker world for some time, I imagine.

vintagebob

Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #11 on: 2 Apr 2020, 05:04 pm »
Oh my.  Sorry to hear this.  RIP Jeff.

poseidonsvoice

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R Swerdlow

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Re: RIP Jeff Bagby
« Reply #13 on: 8 May 2020, 10:39 pm »
Here's that Washington Post article, published on April 8, 2020, written by Brittany Shammas.

He wore a Superman shirt after surviving kidney failure.  He couldn’t beat the coronavirus.


Jeff Bagby endured the grueling dialysis treatments, the years of praying for a new kidney and the eventual transplant with an attitude so unfailingly upbeat, his wife, Christine, joked that she should buy him a Superman shirt.

She ended up finding one online.  Sometimes he wore it beneath a button-up shirt like Clark Kent, with the “S” peeking out from below his collar.  Over the years, she added a Superman mug and a bendable action figure as he took on cancer with the same resolve – and survived it, too.

“It was just his personality,” said Christine, who married Jeff in May 1987.  “He just never let anything get him down.”

But the coronavirus proved to be a health threat he could not overcome.  On March 24, the Chrysler engineer, math whiz and devoted family man became the first person to die of the virus in Howard County, Ind.  He was 60 years old.

His loss was felt not only in his hometown of Kokomo, but also in the obscure world of do-it-yourself loudspeaker enthusiasts.  He had helped make the highly technical hobby accessible, friends said, freely sharing his speaker designs and answering questions in online forums with thousands of followers.  He was sought out at in-person meetups.

“In that niche community, he’s a legend,” said Javad Shadzi of California, a close friend with whom Jeff ran a speaker-building Facebook page.  “He’s a giant.”



He lived in Kokomo almost all of his life, leaving only to attend college in Illinois, at a Christian school now known as Judson University.  There, he studied math – a natural fit for a man who could solve complicated problems in his head.

After graduation, he worked at a building supplies store, writing up tickets for customers at the service counter.  That was where he met Christine, then a recent high school graduate, who was working as a cashier and commented on his clear handwriting.

He lived in Kokomo almost all of his life, leaving only to attend college in Illinois, at a Christian school now known as Judson University.  There, he studied math – a natural fit for a man who could solve complicated problems in his head.

After graduation, he worked at a building supplies store, writing up tickets for customers at the service counter.  That was where he met Christine, then a recent high school graduate, who was working as a cashier and commented on his clear handwriting.

“The joke was that he offered me a stick of gum and it started from there,” she recalled.  “But I don’t know.  He had a personality that was just appealing to me.”

They dated for four years before marrying, through Christine’s time in college and Jeff’s start at the Chrysler Kokomo Transmission Plant, the only other job he would ever have.  Together they have a son, David, who was born in 2001 and inherited his dad’s mathematical prowess.  They taught Sunday school at their church and vacationed in Michigan during the summer.

He called her “the Supermodel”.  “Here I am with the Supermodel,” he would say.  Or, “The Supermodel will be working tomorrow, so drop in and say hi.”  She thought it was a little bit embarrassing, but mostly just cute.

Faith was central to his life, and he knew the Bible as well as he knew math.  He would share mini-sermons on his Facebook page, where he wrote earlier this year about the “storms of life.”

“The bad report you just received, the bad news you heard, the tragedy that suddenly hit – Even though this news may have taken your breath away, none of this caught God off-guard and took Him by surprise,” he posted.  “He knew it was coming.  In fact, He knew every one of your days before one of them came to pass.”



Facebook was also where he connected with other speaker hobbyists.  The group he and Shadzi started, the DIY Loudspeaker Project Pad, grew to have more than 23,000 members within just a few years.  They shared information and planned in-person events, during which they would listen to one another’s speakers.

While accepting an award from the group in 2018, Jeff called the community “a brotherhood”.

“Something that’s so rare is he was someone who had become extremely good at something but never looked down on anyone,” Shadzi said.  “No matter who went up to him, he would help.”

After his death, the group flooded with tributes.  Among them: “If there’s any positive, the speakers in heaven will now sound a lot better” and “May you be where the ultimate speaker sound is achieved.” Christine heard from members in places as far-flung as Indonesia.



In the months before the coronavirus struck, Jeff had been in good health, and the couple had started mapping out the years ahead.  David was set to leave for college in the fall, and “we were talking about the fact it was just going to be him and I, and the things that we’ll do,” Christine said.

How he got the virus is a mystery.  He had not traveled or attended any major gatherings.  He became sick before sports were called off, before Disney World shut its doors and before schools went online – when, Christine put it, the virus “wasn’t on your doorstep.”

“Just like we never knew why his kidneys went bad, we’ll never know where he got this virus from,” she said.  “I guess a consolation for all of it is he had a very strong relationship with the Lord, and he knew where he was going.  He knew this life on earth was not his home.”

His Superman shirt is still tucked away in a drawer.  She doesn’t know what she will do with it yet – just that it’s something to hold on to.