Here is what you need to know: if you’re wondering what a GPS and fitness-watch brand has any business dealing in high-end home audio, it doesn’t sound as abstract when you get into the semantics. By acquiring JL Audio, a brand synonymous with marine and mobile powerhouse acoustics, Garmin didn’t just buy a speaker company; they are buying into mission-critical engineering labs, extreme-environment durability and DSP precision.

Garmin excels at hardware reliability and software ecosystems. Integrating JL Audio allows them to pivot from the wrist and the dashboard into the smart home, leveraging their massive R&D affordable to solve acoustic physics through computation. It may also not be out of bounds for them to offer both navigation and audio solutions as an OEM to carmakers. Nevertheless, the JL Audio Primary project has been in the works for years, way before the Garmin deal materialised, but they will undoubtedly have larger marketing and development budgets now.

From subwoofers to speakers

While JL Audio is a force to be reckoned with in the specialist home-theatre subwoofer (and aftermarket car audio) space, the Primacy is a premium home audio system that aims to “redefine high-end audio” and then asks for USD 90,000 for a pair of floorstanding speakers! It comes in two speaker configurations — the T6, a three-way floorstanding unit, and the more compact S3, a two-way standmount. Both are active speakers, meaning the amplification is built directly into the cabinet, with individual amp channels for each driver. The brains of the operation is the CS Centrepiece, a network streamer, preamplifier and room optimisation hub that connects to the speakers using Dante Digital Network, a pro-grade AV networking protocol that keeps the signal chain high-resolution all the way to the driver. By moving the digital-to-analog conversion to the speaker itself, Garmin bypasses the interference of traditional cables. This pro-grade, low-latency backbone ensures the audio signal remains perfectly synced at all times.

Tech behind the acoustics

The DSP engine runs at 32-bit/192kHz, which is as much headroom as any human ear could ask for, and the enclosures themselves are machined from a single cast aluminium alloy with integrated bracing built to control resonance rather than add to it. Streaming support is comprehensive: Spotify Connect, Tidal Connect, Qobuz Connect, Roon Ready, AirPlay 2 and Google Cast are all on board, so whether you’re a lossless loyalist or a pragmatic Spotify user, the Primacy won’t judge you. One of the main talking points and cost-centres of the Primacy system is the sophisticated room optimisation system built into the speakers. P.A.R.O. (Primacy Automatic Room Optimization) represents a shift from passive listening to active correction, and it acts as its own acoustic engineer, recalculating phase and timing to negate floor reflections and standing waves.

Primacy range of products

A weighted, tactile wireless remote sits on your coffee table, looking expensive and, like no other unit, featuring an actual volume knob! Yes, a volume knob on the remote control and it may just be the most satisfying feeling after the invention of memory foam ear cushions. But all of this tech isn’t for the faint-hearted. While we await the Indian pricing for the range, in the US it’s USD 90,000 for the T6 floorstanders, USD 35,000 for the S3 standmounts, and another USD 15,000 for the CS Centrepiece. The technology inside is genuinely impressive, and Dante networking at this level is a smart choice that most consumer audio brands wouldn’t even consider. But the room optimisation, the app control, and the wireless streaming ecosystem are features that are increasingly common across products at every price range now. Whether the Primacy delivers on all its sonic promises and claims is something only a proper listening session can confirm. But as opening statements go from a GPS company, this is one of the most audacious moves the hi-fi scene has seen in years!