The present invention relates to loudspeaker systems, and more particularly, to low frequency passive radiator systems.
The miniaturization of loudspeakers has been a trend since the early days of domestic high-fidelity music systems. Space constraints and aesthetics are the driving forces for speaker miniaturization, and have been assisted by developments in transducer design and digital electronics. Presently, loudspeaker systems can be miniaturized to the point where the limiting factor is the physical realization of the enclosure, including the enclosure's size.
In the art of loudspeaker systems it is desirable to obtain an extended low frequency response. In addition, it is generally desirable to minimize the size of the loudspeaker enclosure, for example to reduce cost and allow for more flexible placement. These two goals are often in opposition, and it is well known that obtaining extended low frequency response typically requires large, floor standing speakers with significant internal volumes, and/or large diameter woofers. Both options require tradeoffs in terms of efficiency, cost and flexibility of use, with large speakers typically being less efficient, costing more, and being less flexible in terms of placement in a listener's home.
Among low frequency loudspeaker systems, the class known as “reflex systems” has approximately a 6 decibel (dB) advantage in efficiency/bandwidth over a simple sealed box loudspeaker. Accordingly, these reflex systems are commonly the system of choice where an extended low frequency response in a small device is desired. A reflex system loudspeaker can be implemented by constructing a duct, for example, a tube, connecting the interior of the loudspeaker enclosure to the outside environment. In operation of the loudspeaker, the air inside the duct becomes an acoustic mass, and the air within the enclosure is an acoustic compliance or spring. The acoustic mass and spring together create a second order filter system, which when combined with the natural second order response of the loudspeaker transducer, creates a fourth order high pass filter. This fourth order filter may exhibit approximately a 24 dB/octave attenuation of the low frequencies, for example. This system becomes increasingly difficult to realize with high performance miniature low frequency transducers because the necessary duct dimensions and volume approach or surpass those of the enclosure itself. Additionally, long duct tubes produce distortions of the acoustic output, for example, pipe resonances and other noise, which may render the system unusable, particularly in high performance applications.
An alternative implementation of a reflex system replaces the duct with a passive radiator. A passive radiator is essentially a loudspeaker without a magnet or voice coil. A passive radiator system may replicate the intended response of a vented system without the physical size and volume of the duct, producing a further miniaturized loudspeaker system. This may be accomplished by attaching a substantial weight to the passive radiator, which resonates with the compliance of the enclosed air in the loudspeaker enclosure. This weight can be approximately 10-50 times that of the moving mass of the active transducer. Modern loudspeaker systems may be constructed using lightweight, rigid space frames and miniature Neodymium magnet structures in low frequency transducers. In such systems, the passive radiator mass in vibratory motion can physically knock the loudspeaker onto its side, or cause it to move across surfaces and potentially fall. Accordingly, the stability, and hence the usefulness, of such systems is limited. In order to tune the passive radiator(s) in a small enclosure to a very low frequency, a great deal of mass must be added to the passive radiator(s), and the more mass added, the lower the resonant frequency of the radiator. There is also another dimension to the passive radiator(s) known as the compliance. Typically, the suspension of the radiator/driver acts as a mechanical spring that has damping properties and contributes to losses in the system. Increasing the mass of the radiators can negatively impact low frequency performance, particularly if the radiators are downward facing, since the high mass causes the suspension of the passive radiators to sag.
Assume for example, a rectilinear loudspeaker enclosure housing a woofer, on any of the six surfaces, and a single passive radiator on one vertical face. The stability of the system will be affected by the movement and location of the passive radiator, and the weight distribution of the system as a whole. There are two break points in system stability. First, when the force generated by the movement of the passive radiator shifts the center of gravity of the system such that the measured weight on one extreme side of the base of the loudspeaker system is countered or exceeded by this force, the enclosure will begin to rock back and forth. Second, if the force created by the mass times the acceleration of the passive radiator's movement exceeds the measured mass of the loudspeaker system at one extreme of the base of the loudspeaker system, and continues for a period of time of sufficient duration to move the center of gravity outside of the base of the loudspeaker system, the vertical integrity of the loudspeaker system will be compromised, and the loudspeaker may fall over. For example, the force created by 200 Hz raised cosine waveform is approximately ten times greater than at 20 Hz, and while lasting only one-tenth as long can be sufficient to easily destabilize a loudspeaker system. These stability concerns are scalable, and apply to any size loudspeaker system.
The above and other problems are addressed by an inertially balanced implementation of a miniature passive radiator full-range loudspeaker system. In one embodiment the speaker system is minimally a two-way system with low and high frequency components, where the low-frequency component is comprised of one active transducer and two passive radiators and the frequency range for this component is not outside of 10 Hz to 500 Hz. The rational here is that the “best implementation” of the design is to have a dedicated low-frequency component such that high frequencies are not modulated by the low frequency driver. Thus, the loudspeaker system can accurately reproduce the full audible frequency spectrum with both the low and high frequency components being optimized for the corresponding portions of the audible frequency spectrum. As the full-range loudspeaker system only requires a single active transducer, the cost is reduced and the convenience is increased. For example, the loudspeaker system may be easily integrated into a flat screen television.
Figure (
a shows an alternate configuration for an inertially balanced loudspeaker system integrated into a computer, television, or monitor, in accordance with one embodiment.
b is an expanded view of a pair of passive radiators from
Aspects and embodiments are directed to an inertially stable implementation of a miniature passive radiator loudspeaker system. The loudspeaker system uses passive radiators that are tuned to a very low frequency through added mass, while at the same time maximizing the efficiency and output by minimizing the losses due to low compliance and/or high damping. The result is a passive radiator that is ideally positioned on a vertical surface because if the passive radiator were placed on a horizontal surface (facing up or down) it would sag because of the high compliance suspension and the relatively high mass of the cone and added weight. Placing the radiators on opposed vertical surfaces results in an inertially stable configuration.
In one embodiment, a speaker system is minimally a two-way system where the low-frequency component is comprised of one active transducer and two passive radiators and the frequency range for this component is not outside of 10 Hz to 500 Hz. This frequency range for the low-frequency component is preferred so that high frequencies are not modulated by the low frequency driver. According to one embodiment, a miniature low frequency loudspeaker system is constructed with all moving passive masses within their respective frequency ranges and responses divided between two or a multiple of two equal but physically opposed devices (i.e., located on opposite sides of an enclosure), such that the net momentum of the moving passive masses is canceled out, creating a stable system free from extraneous vibration, physical rocking, or falling over on its side. In one embodiment, the enclosure has a small footprint, such as a box smaller than 15.5″×10″×7.5″. In certain examples the loudspeakers are wireless speakers that may be wirelessly connected to other audio and/or audiovisual components.
According to certain embodiments, in a loudspeaker system with low frequency extension, small size, and high output, a passive radiator system including two passive radiators is configured as follows. First, the low frequency active speaker has sufficient surface area and excursion to move the required amount of air to affect the sound pressure level desired at the lowest frequency of interest, for example, to produce output in excess of 80 decibels at 50 Hz, measured at a distance of 1 meter. Second, the passive radiators are chosen to have a total surface area and excursion sufficient to move the required amount of air to affect the sound pressure level desired at the tuning frequency of the system. A factor of twice that of the active driver is recommended for typical QB3-QB4 alignments. This may be barely adequate for more extreme alignments requiring an extended bass response. In some embodiments, the surface area of the passive radiator may approach or even exceed three times the surface area of the active driver. In one embodiment, the total surface area of the passive radiators is 2.8 times the area of the active transducer.
For a given box volume and passive radiator surface area, the moving mass of the passive radiator is inversely proportional to the square of the tuning frequency of the system. For a given tuning frequency and passive radiator surface area, the moving mass of the passive radiator is inversely proportional to the square of the box volume. From these relationships it can be inferred that the moving mass of the passive radiator may be reduced greatly by the use a very small surface area with a long excursion suspension. However, it has been found that such conventional long excursion suspensions as may be used on sub-woofer drivers have substantially greater mechanical resistances such that the resonant effect needed to produce low frequency extension is effectively damped out, and the benefits of the reflex design are progressively negated. In consideration of these problems, in the various embodiments the compliance and damping of the passive radiator is lowered as much as possible by expressly using soft suspension parts (softer than typically used).
Furthermore, the moving mass of the active driver, though generally substantially less than that of the passive radiator, may be driven at sufficiently high accelerations that similar destabilizing effects to those attributed to the passive radiators as discussed above may be caused by the active driver. To overcome this problem, it is preferable to orient the active driver in the axis of gravity (facing up or down) in order to minimize it's affects of movement on the system. Because the active driver is producing mostly low frequency components of the sound, this is not substantially detrimental to the output sound quality.
One aspect is directed to a method of balancing the passive and active masses of a loudspeaker system such that all forces are negated, the system's non-output vibration is greatly reduced, and inertial stability is achieved in a manner that uniquely allows the use of a miniature passive radiator system. Generally, this stability is achieved using a minimum number of active transducers and radiators, thereby reducing overall system component costs and complexity. For example, in one embodiment, there is a single active transducer oriented on a horizontal surface of a rectilinear, (e.g., rectangular) enclosure, and two passive radiators oriented on opposite vertical surfaces thereof. As a result, substantially all of the forces produced by the oscillating passive system are balanced and cancel out, leaving an inertially balanced loudspeaker system.
An example of such a system is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the signal received by the loudspeaker system is split by a crossover into two portions. The crossover may be passive (e.g., a passive crossover network) or active (e.g., a digital signal processor). The first portion, used to drive the active transducer 130, is passed through a low pass filter of the crossover, such as that demonstrated by graph 150. The second portion, used to drive the high frequency speaker 135, is passed through a high pass filter of the crossover, such as that demonstrated by graph 140. A crossover frequency in the range 100 Hz to 500 Hz is typically used. Thus, the high frequency speaker 135 can be optimized to accurately reproduce frequencies above the crossover frequency without modulation caused by the low frequency active transducer 130. The combination of the active transducer 130 and the passive radiators 120a and 120b can be optimized to actively reproduce frequencies below the crossover frequency. Alternatively, the enclosure 110 may be tuned using techniques known in the art such that, when provided with a full-frequency-range source signal, the sound output of the high frequency speaker 135 resembles graph 140 and the combined sound output of the active driver 130 and passive radiator pair 120 resembles graph 150.
As discussed above, the pair of passive radiators 120a, 120b are designed to have balanced or matching moving masses, such that in operation of the loudspeaker system the momentum of the passive radiators balances out, resulting in an inertially balanced system.
Still referring to
Although only a single pair of passive radiators 120a, 120b is illustrated in
In the example illustrated in
In some examples, the loudspeaker system may be configured, for example, by appropriately selecting the weights and/or arrangements of the passive radiator and/or active transducer pair(s) such that the level of the pre-balanced inertial energy equals or surpasses the total physical weight of the loudspeaker system, or equals or surpasses the force needed to physically destabilize a loudspeaker system, such as in a tall configuration where the height of the speaker system is greater than its width.
The loudspeaker system shown in
a shows an alternate configuration for an inertially balanced loudspeaker system integrated into a computer monitor 700 or the like. In this configuration, left and right high frequency speakers 135 are situated on the front face of the computer monitor 700 to either side of the screen 180. Thus, the high frequency speakers 135 are separated by the maximum distance possible and provide the best possible stereo spread given the limited size of the monitor 700. The computer monitor 700 also has left and right low frequency enclosures 720 situated either side of the screen 180. Each low frequency enclosure includes a low frequency acoustic volume 702 and houses a low frequency active transducer 130 as well as an inertially balanced pair of passive radiators 120. The pairs of passive radiators 120 are situated with one pointing forwards and one pointing backwards, as shown in
According to certain examples, each pair of opposed passive radiators 120 uses a loudspeaker drive unit with voice coil and magnet; however, the passive radiators are not connected to the driving amplifier of the system. Instead, each passive radiator of a pair is connected to the other in phase. As shown in
In
In one example, a passive reactive network is connected between the passive radiators of a pair using motors and voice coils, such that back-EMF below a desired frequency is fed out of phase to each passive radiator of the pair. As a result, any movement in a desired band of the frequency range covered by the passive radiators, such as infra-sonic vibrations below the low frequency tuning of the system, or unwanted resonances, may effectively be reduced or eliminated. These passive reactive electrical networks may include, for example, resistors, capacitors, inductors or semiconductors, or state variable designs of the above; and may include parallel, series, or combination circuits of band pass, band reject, high pass or low pass, as may allow the designer to tailor the desired frequency response.
In another example, the loudspeaker system includes a compound or isobaric arrangement of drivers, passive radiators, or both, such that the total system size may be decreased by a factor approaching 2, particularly for the sub-miniaturization of vibrationless passive radiator systems.
In embodiments described above, low frequency loudspeaker systems have balanced passive radiators as shown in
Having described above several aspects of at least one embodiment, it is to be appreciated various alterations, modifications, and improvements will readily occur to those skilled in the art, and that methods and apparatuses are capable of implementation in other embodiments and of being practiced or of being carried out in various ways. Such alterations, modifications, and improvements are intended to be part of this disclosure and are intended to be within the scope of the invention. It is to be appreciated that embodiments of the methods and apparatuses discussed herein are not limited in application to the details of construction and the arrangement of components set forth in this description or illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Examples of specific implementations are provided herein for illustrative purposes only and are not intended to be limiting. The accompanying figures are included to provide illustration and a further understanding of the various aspects and embodiments, but are not intended as a definition of the limits of the invention. The figures are not intended to be drawn to scale. Also, the phraseology and terminology used herein is for the purpose of description and should not be regarded as limiting. Any references to front and back, left and right, top and bottom, upper and lower, and vertical and horizontal are intended for convenience of description, not to limit the present systems and methods or their components to any one positional or spatial orientation. Accordingly, the foregoing description and drawings are by way of example only.
An example loudspeaker system comprises 1 Pair of Seas 6.5″ Passive Radiators. Note that 6.5″ is what Seas describes the Passive radiators as, however the basket diameter is closer to 6.9″ and the effective piston Diameter is approximately 4.4″.
Given a modified larger roll Surround (for High Excursion) and modified softer Spider (for High Compliance), each PR has the following characteristics:
With 100 g added, for a total Mms of 141.5 grams/Passive Radiator a modified Fo of ˜11 Hz can be achieved.
With two PR's as described above, using standard speaker design alignment methods and given a Vb for the enclosure of approximately 600 in3, an equivalent total (single) Passive Radiator Sd=190 cm2 (2× the above PR to create a “pair”) and a total Mms of 283 g is achieved. The Resultant Box Tuning=˜25 to 30 Hz at −3 dB from nominal response.
It is important to note that an equivalent single passive radiator with an Sd of 190 cm2 would have an effective piston diameter of 15.5 cm. Given a standard or even low profile frame and accounting for non-contributing surround area, the total diameter of such a device could easily be 21 cm or approximately 8.25″ in diameter.
Given an interior volume of 600 in3 and an approximate 0.75″ cabinet thickness, and assuming outside cabinet dimensions of 15.5″×7.5″×7.5″ (for a non active design where the size would increase as a result of internal electronics) it's clear that an 8.52″ diameter passive radiator actually exceeds two of the three linear speaker size dimensions for a rectilinear enclosure that has proper acoustic proportions (usually an approximation or multiple of 1.618 to 1 or greater across the front face width and height).
It is also clear that given a single moving mass of 283 grams (or 0.623 lbs) that the current embodiment of such a speaker which would be a combination of wood and aluminum having an approximate weight of 18 lbs. could be easily moved by a “greater than ½ lb oscillating mass” moving at 27 Hz.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/530,069 filed on Jun. 21, 2012, entitled “Inertially Balanced Miniature Low Frequency Speaker System” which claims the benefit under 35 U.S.C §119(e) of provisional application Ser. No. 61/499,403 filed on Jun. 21, 2011.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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7953239 | Decanio | May 2011 | B2 |
20100111343 | Hsu | May 2010 | A1 |
20120033826 | Kakumoto | Feb 2012 | A1 |
Entry |
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Klipsch Group Company, “Jamo SUB 800,” 1 page, [online][retrieved on Nov. 13, 2013] Retrieved from the Internet <URL:http://www.voxxintlcorp.com/docs/common/SUB800/SUB800—CUT—SH.pdf>. |
AE Spakers, “Passive Radiator Frequently Asked Questions,” 4 Pages, [online] [Archived on web.archive.org on Mar. 18, 2009] [Retrieved on Jan. 10, 2014] Retrieved from the internet <URL:https://web.archive.org/web/20090318180410/http:/aespeakers.com/PRFAQ.php>. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61499403 | Jun 2011 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13530069 | Jun 2012 | US |
Child | 13534980 | US |