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Sabine International Corporate Headquarters, Alachua, Florida USA
Our History

Sabine, Inc., located in its new international
headquarters in Alachua, Florida, manufactures professional audio equipment
essential to live, installed and recording sound venues large and small.
Sabine's FBX Feedback Exterminator® is the industry standard for transparent,
feedback-free sound. Sabine True Mobility® wireless microphones systems
(with built-in FBX) give performers the clearest sound and maximum mic
mobility. Sabine Music Accessories division manufactures some of the
best-selling musical instrument tuners and accessories in the industry.
A graduate of the University of Florida's
School of Engineering, Sabine founder and CEO Doran Oster built the company
based on innovation and quality. "Some people go into business distributing
other people's products, or making products that are similar to everyone
else's product, but cheaper," Oster said. "That's what I call a 'me too'
product. We don't have the resources to do things cheaper than our international
competitors. A Sabine product has to be something new or something substantially
better than what's on the market."
Sabine, Inc. began as a guitar repair/flute
manufacturing shop in 1971 in Gainesville, Florida. The company added
accessories and guitars to the retail store's inventory and with a special
attention to customer service, Sabine Music Center soon became the largest
music and instrument retailer in North Central Florida.
Oster refocused the company back to manufacturing
with the invention of the "best capo ever made." Emphasis on manufacturing
continued with the introduction of the company's first electronic product,
the MT-4001 quartz metronome.
Sabine introduced its first tuner, the ST-1000,
in 1987, and by 1990 it became the best-selling chromatic tuner in the
United States. Sabine then pioneered the world's first automatic feedback
controller, the FBX Feedback Exterminator, in 1990. The FBX won the 1991
Technical Excellence and Creativity Award for "Outstanding Technical Achievement,"
was named "Pick Hit" at the 1992 National Association of Broadcasters
Convention, was chosen as "Product of the Year" by the British Professional
Light and Sound Association in 1993, and was a finalist for Discover Magazine's
Technological Innovation Award in 1996.
In 1999, Sabine introduced the next step
in wireless systems: True Mobility® Wireless Microphone Systems with
on-board FBX Feedback Exterminator®, compressor/limiter and de-esser.
No other wireless system offers the True Mobility's freedom from feedback
or the ability to tailor the sound of individual inputs. The easy-to-use
controls and 1-U size make it a must for performers, pastors/preachers
and boardroom execs alike. Sabine recently began shipping the new SWM7000
Series 2.4 GHz Wireless Microphone Systems - a tremendous breakthrough
in wireless technology. With Sabine’s onboard DSP: FBX, Compressor/Limiter,
De-esser and Microphone SuperModeling™ - and the freedom of the
2.4 GHz band, the SWM7000 has set the new standard for the wireless industry.
Users of Sabine products include: The White
House, the Vienna State Opera House, the Australian Parliament, the United
Nations Headquarters, SeaWorld Adventure Parks, the Walt Disney Company,
NASA, the Rolling Stones, the BlackEyed Peas, Universal Studios, the Vatican,
the Oprah Winfrey Show, the David Letterman Show and many others.
President and Founder, Doran Oster


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By ANTHONY CLARK
Gainesville Sun business editor |
DORAN OSTER
60, founder and president,
Sabine Inc.
PERSONAL: Single, two adult sons
HOBBY: Sailing
FAVORITE BOOK: "High Performance Sailing"
DREAM PARTNER FOR LUNCH: Albert Einstein: "It'd be a waste of time, but just to breath the same air...' "
BEST ADVICE RECEIVED: "My mom taught me the golden rule"
FAVORITE MOVIE: "Pulp Fiction"
FAVORITE CD: "I listen to so much music"
ALACHUA - Doran Oster made out pretty well for a guy who said he wasn't good enough to pursue his first two career interests. He was a serious classical flutist in high school - almost majoring in music - but realized he probably wasn't in the top 1 to 2 percent of those who can actually make a living at it. He studied industrial engineering at the University of Florida, but after graduation decided that wasn't for him. What he was good at was fixing his friends' guitars, a skill he parlayed into the Sabine String Shop, opening in downtown Gainesville in 1971. That evolved into one of the largest music retail shops in the region by the mid-1980s. The business would evolve again when a guitar tuner Oster developed in conjunction with a UF professor became the best-selling tuner in the nation. He closed his retail operation in 1992 and, with proceeds from the tuner, developed digital anti-feedback technology that would go in rack-mounted hardware and later in wireless microphone systems.
Today, Sabine Inc. digital audio signal processors and mic systems are used in conference halls, churches, universities, sound studios and concert halls the world over. Users include the White Housethe Vatican, the United Nations, the Vienna State Opera House and Australian Parliament; performers from the Rolling Stones to Britney Spears; even the once-feuding David Letterman and Oprah Winfrey. Oster grew up in St. Petersburg and came to Gainesville to attend UF in 1965. olk music was booming. "Music was just hugely important to college-aged students," he said. "Then, almost everybody played guitar. It's real different now. Almost everybody plays iPods, which I have to tell you is easier." He filled a need by repairing guitars, first for friends and later for strangers. "When I graduated from college, I had a long talk with myself and realized that of all the engineers I was probably the best musician and of all the musicians I was probably the best engineer." He gave up on the idea of being an engineer and became a craftsman. Oster got the name "Sabine" from a character in the French film "Jules and Jim." He didn't learn until 10 years later that Sabine is the name of the father of acoustic architecture and the word for the unit of absorption of sound energy on a wall.In addition to classical flute, Oster had also played folk banjo since high school. He set out to solve the problem of keeping his banjo in tune, eventually realizing it was because of the capo, abar that clamps down on the strings to change keys.
That led to his first patent, a capo that allows string instruments to stay in tune. Over the years, his retail shop would move from University Avenue to North Main Street and then NW 13th St.He rented manufacturing space behind Mother Earth and sold capos at music stores around the nation. Manufacturing would eventually move to NW 6th Street. He discontinued capos when the ST-1000 tuner took off and closed his retail business in 1992. With the money from the tuners, Sabine set out to solve the problem of acoustic feedback. They were able to isolate feedback from other sounds and program digital sound processors to eliminate the feedback between mics and amplifiers.The same feedback elimination technology would later go in Sabine's wireless microphones. The mic systems are built to use rechargeable batteries. Sabine built a 45,000-square-foot manufacturing facility in Alachua in 1996. The company has had as many as 70 employees, but is down to about 40 as some of its metal and plastic manufacturing is now done in China. Oster said he was one of the last in the audio industry to outsource. "We add the secret sauce here - the circuit board design and assembly." Sabine products are sold directly to professional sound system installers. Oster would not reveal sales or production figures. Recent customers include Brigham Young University, which installed wireless systems in every classroom, and the Venetian casino in Macau, China. Oster said 40 percent of his products are exported.
"Our reputation is built around having some of the best sounding mics, with better bass response," in addition to feedback control, he said. Oster said he enjoys doing the mechanical and design work. "For the morning, I'll talk to the electrical guys about how to make the buttons fit mechanically and the circuit work, and in the afternoon I'll talk to the marketing guys and they'll say, 'It doesn't look right. We don't want this button here because the preacher can't reach it in his pocket.'" He even tested the durability of a belt-mounted mic transmitter himself.
"I ran it over with my Volvo."
Anthony Clark can be reached at 352-374-5094 or anthony.clark@gvillesun.com.
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Time Line


2008
- Sabine releases
the Phantom Gooseneck Mics, the podum mics with the Phantom Processor built right in
- Phantom Processor has two additonal lines added
2007
- Sabine releases
the Phantom Processor
- The next generation of Navigator
System Processors are released
- Significant updates to the SWM7000
BeltPack Transmitter
2006
- Sabine releases
the Navigator System Processors
2005
- Sabine releases
the Graphi-Q2 Multi-Function Digital Signal Processors
2004
- Sabine releases
the FBX1200 and 2400 Feedback Exterminators.
- 2.4 GHz Smart
Spectrum Wireless Microphone System is nominated for a TEC Award for Outstanding Technical Achievement
- Sabine introduces
the NexTune 12z and 6z Instrument Tuners
- 2.4 GHz Smart
Spectrum Wireless Microphone System wins Pro Audio Review Reviewer's
Pick Award
2003
- Sabine begins
shipping the new 2.4 GHz Smart Spectrum Wireless Microphone
Systems
2002
- True Mobility
2.4 GHz receives Cool Stuff Award from Radio World
- MetroTune MT9000
Music & Sound Retailer Best Accessory Product 2002 nomination
2001
- GRAPHI-Q receives
Readers Choice - Platinum Award (Innovation Technology,
Audio: Sound/Noise Control) from AV Video Multimedia Producer
- RT7000 Series
Pro Rack Tuner receives Best New Accessory Product nomination from The Music & Sound Retailer
- ZIP700 Tuner receives "The Best of the TopTen" Award (General Accessories)
from The Music & Sound Retailer
2000
- GRAPHI-Q receives Prove It All Night award from Gig Magazine
1999
- Sabine True Mobility
Wireless Microphone Systems (VHF & UHF) with FBX, compressor/limiter
and de-esser debuts
- BackTrak BT-316M
Digital Phrase Trainer with 16-bit audio and power-off memory debuts
- GRAPHI-Q receives
prestigious Blue Ribbon Editor's Choice Award from
EQ Magazine
- BackTrak receives Prove It All Night award from Gig Magazine
1998
- Sabine Adaptive
Audio® division introduces GRAPHI-Q all digital 31-band EQ, FBX,
compressor/limiter and delay
- Sabine Music Accessory
division introduces BackTrak BT-300 Digital Phrase Trainer
1996
- Sabine introduces
the POWER-Q ADF-4000 Digital Work Station with nine pro audio products
in one 2-U box
- Manufacturing
plant and corporate offices move to new 45,000-square-foot facility
located on a 40-acre site in Alachua, Florida
- REAL-Q chosen
as finalist for Discover Magazine's Technological Innovation
Award
1995
- REAL-Q given British
Professional Light and Sound Product Excellence Award
1994
- Sabine introduces
the ADF-2400 Digital Workstation
1993
- British Professional
Light and Sound Association selects FBX as Product of the Year
- Sabine RT-1600
rack turner receives Music & Sound Award: Most Innovative
Accessory Product
1992
- FBX chosen as Pick Hit at the 1992 National Association of Broadcasters
Convention. T
- The Sabine retail
music store closes, Sabine, Inc. focuses on manufacturing. CEO Oster
emphasizes innovation and products based on patentable technology
1991
- FBX wins the
1991 Technical Excellence and Creativity Award for Outstanding
Technical Achievement presented by MIX Magazine
1990
- Debut of the world's first
automatic feedback controller, the patented FBX Feedback Exterminator®. FBX automatically detects feedback and removes it with surgical
precision, leaving program untouched. The result is a 6 dB gain in loudness
and crisper, more intelligible sound
1987
- Sabine introduces
the ST-1000 chromatic tuner, by 1990 it becomes the best selling chromatic
tuner in the United States
1986
- Sabine introduces
its first electronic product, a metronome
1977
- Retail business
begins to give way to manufacturing as Sabine, Inc. founder and CEO,
Doran Oster, adds his first invention, a capo with a patented design
that doesn't throw the instrument out of tune
1971
- Sabine, Inc. begins
as a guitar repair and copper flute manufacturing shop in Gainesville,
Florida
- Music accessories
and guitars are added to the store's inventory; Sabine soon becomes
the largest music and instrument retailer in North Central Florida
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President:
Location:
Employees:
USA Sales Representatives:
Worldwide International Distributors:
Years in Existence:
Product Lines:
Projected Avg. Sales Growth:
Accolades:
Milestones:
Contact: |
Doran
Oster
13301 US Highway 441, Alachua, FL 32615-8544 USA 386) 418-2000;fax: (386) 418-2001 e-mail: Sabine@Sabine.com
65
(Administrative, Engineering, Sales & Marketing, Production)
58
70
37 (Since 1971)
Adaptive Audio Equipment® Products
True MobilityTM SWM7000 2.4 GHz Smart Spectrum Wireless Microphone
Systems
FBX1200 & FBX2400 Feedback Exterminators®
FBX-SOLOTM Feedback Exterminators®
GRAPHI-Q2TM
GRQ3121 and GRQ3122 Multi-Function Digital Signal Processors
PHANTOM MIC RIDERSTM
PHANTOM GOOSENECK MICROPHONESTM
Music Accessories
Tuners: AX3000TM& AX3000-WTM
Contact AutoTuners
STX1100TM AutoTuner
NexTuneTM 6z & 12z AutoTuners
MT9000 MetroTuneTM
ZIPBEAT 6000TMMetronome
30% per year
ST-1100 designated
best-selling chromatic tuner in U.S. since 1989
(Music and Sound Retailer)
RT-1601
designated "Most Innovative Accessory Product"
(1993 Music and Sound Awards)
FBX Feedback
Exterminator® won 1991 Technical Excellence and
Creativity Award for "Outstanding Technical Achievement"
FBX
named Pick Hit at 1992 NAB Convention
(Broadcast Engineering, Video Systems)
FBX
named 1993 Product of the Year by British Professional Light &
Sound Assoc.
REAL-Q
received 1995 PLASA Commendation for Product Excellence
REAL-Q
a finalist for 1996 DISCOVER Award for Technological Innovation
(Discover Magazine)
GRAPHI-Q
named 1999 Blue Ribbon Editor's Choice
(EQ Magazine)
FBX, REAL-Q, AX-Tuner and ClipGuard
patents granted
Robotic assembly
added
Doubled employee
number and facility floor space in past four years
Lean Manufacturing
instituted
Rob
Rothschild, Director of Marketing
Don Boomer, Director of Sales - Western Region
Joe Nguyen, Director of Sales - Eastern Region
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Driving Directions


Sabine, Inc., 13301
US Highway 441 • Alachua, Florida 32615-8544
(386) 418-2000
Sabine Coordinates: N 29' 46.740' • W 082'26.867'
From the Gainesville Regional Airport (Click
for map)
Exit the airport and turn right on SR-222 (3400 NE 39th Avenue).
Go approximately 3 miles to the intersection of SR-222 and US-441 (Gainesville
NW 13th Street).
Turn right onto US-441 and travel north approximately 12 miles. Sabine
will be on your right, just past Southern Precast Dr.
From the
Gainesville Best Western to Sabine (I-75, Exit 390)
(Click for map)
Turn right out of the hotel complex onto N.W. 97 Blvd. and follow it to
the intersection of N.W. 39th Ave.
Turn left onto N.W. 39th Ave and go over I-75. The northbound entrance
of I-75 is immediately after the overpass.
Take I-75 approximately 10 miles to Exit 399 for Alachua and High Springs.
Turn left out of the exit onto US-441 South toward Alachua. Sabine is
approximately 4 miles south on US-441 on your left.
NOTE: US-441 is a divided highway at this point. Therefore, you must do
a U-turn just past Sabine's entrance and approach Sabine from the south.
Best Western Gateway Grand Hotel
4200 NW 97th Blvd. (I-75 exit 390)
(352) 331-3336
Jacksonville
Int. Airport (JAX): (Click
for map)
Exit the airport and take I-95 South a few miles to the 295 South
entrance. Proceed south on 295 to the intersection with I-10.
Take I-10 West to the intersection with US-301. Take US-301 South towards
Starke.
Do not exceed the speed limit on this highway! In Waldo, exit right off
of US-301 onto SR-24 towards Gainesville.
Do not exceed the speed limit in Waldo! Proceed south on SR-24 to the
intersection with SR-222 (Gainesville NE 39th Avenue) .
Turn right onto SR-222 and go west to the intersection with US-441 (Gainesville
NW13th St.).
Turn right onto US-441 and travel north approximately 12 miles. Sabine
will be on your right, just past Southern Precast Dr.
Orlando Int.
Airport (MCO): (Click
for map)
Exit the airport and take SR-528 West (Bee Line Expressway, toll
road) 6 miles to the intersection with the Florida Turnpike (toll road).
Take the Florida Turnpike north towards Ocala and I-75 (approximately
51 miles to I-75).
Go north on I-75 past Ocala and Gainesville.
Get off I-75 at Exit 399 (Alachua, High Springs, US-441) go south on US-441
1 mile to Alachua, and then 3 miles to Sabine.
NOTE: US-441 is a divided highway at this point. Therefore, you must do
a U-turn just past Sabine's entrance and approach Sabine from the south.
Tampa Int.
Airport (TPA): (Click
for map)
Exit the airport and take I-275 North.
Continue on I-275, following signs for I-75 North.
I-275 merges with I-75, go north on I-75 towards Ocala and Gainesville.
Continue on I-75 past Ocala and Gainesville.
Get off I-75 at Exit 399 (Alachua, High Springs, US-441) go south on US-441
1 mile to Alachua, and then 3 miles to Sabine.
NOTE: US-441 is a divided highway at this point. Therefore, you must do
a U-turn just past Sabine's entrance and approach Sabine from the south.
Employment


Open Positions: Engineering
Technician
Join the Sabine team!
Engineering
Technician
Sabine has an immediate opening at its Alachua, Florida facility
for and Engineering Technician. Candidate must possess the ability to
read schematics, be familiar with common test and diagnostic equipment
and have the ability to trouble-shoot at the component level. Experience
with analog and digital circuitry required; soldering skills in both through
hole and surface mount connections highly desired; A.S. degree, military
training, and RF and SMT experience a plus.If you meet the above qualifications
and have demonstrated ability working as a team member in a manufacturing
environment please attach your resume in an email to hr@sabine.com
or fax resume and cover letter to 386-418-2001, attn: HR. 070605
Sabine is an EOE/Drug-free Workplace
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