The subject of the invention is a directional loudspeaker system for low frequency sound.
Directional character and noise cancellation are of increasing importance in open-air events and are also known to help produce sound more accurately in reverberant environments such as concert halls and sport arenas.
The invention relates to bass loudspeaker systems with rearward sound suppression. The key feature compared to the prior art is to obtain a considerably higher acoustic output in front of the speaker system compared to previous designs. Bass loudspeaker systems are described in prior art publications: U.S. Pat. No. 8,842,866, US20050178611, U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,588,065, 5,073,945, US2008137894A1, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,348,549A and 3,816,672A.
Single enclosure bass loudspeaker systems have typically very low directivity character because of the large wavelength which is to be radiated to produce sound in the bass region, in frequencies between 30 Hz to 100 Hz, which equals wavelengths from 10 m to 3 m. To have a directional character comparable to the said wavelengths the enclosures and particularly the radiating surfaces need to be around the same size which would make them hard or impossible to carry or install in most environments such as indoors or limited space outdoor facilities.
There are several approaches already known which can be used to improve the directivity of low frequency sound sources. One option is to use an open back enclosure, i.e., a so called dipole arrangement, in which sound waves in the sides of the enclosure are canceled due to out of phase summing of sound radiating from front and back of a single transducer.
A second option is to have two separate sound sources, in which case one sound source usually radiates to the listening direction and other sound source to the opposite direction. The sound source radiating to the opposite direction is tuned to have the same radiation character, i.e., frequency and phase response, compared to the one radiating in front. When inverting the polarity of the sound radiating to the opposite direction one can cancel the sound arriving from the rear radiating source thus creating directional radiating character. This is known to be done with either two amplifier channels with different drive signals or by tuning the opposite radiating sound source with an additional low-pass filter.
A vented high-pass front enclosure and a sixth-order enclosure for the opposite radiating enclosure can be used.
In all cases these known ways to create directional radiating character suffer from low efficiency due to not using the two sound sources to increase the sound pressure in front but instead to decrease the sound radiating to the opposite direction.
It is known to use two or three sound sources in a row and delay the front sound source or front sound sources to match the propagation time difference due to distance. This arrangement is known to cancel the sound waves with wave lengths of four times the enclosure distance when observed behind the row of speakers, opposite the direction of radiation pattern. In such a configuration any type of bass enclosure can be used, for example, high efficiency horn-loaded speakers.
The purpose of the invention is to obtain a higher acoustic output in front of the speaker system by increasing the sound pressure in front of the speaker system and to increase the directional output character of the loudspeaker system.
The invention is based on an object of providing a loudspeaker system which has a high efficiency loading in a front radiating sound source with an internal propagation time difference to compensate the time difference of the sound waves radiated from the opposite direction radiating sound source arriving to the front.
For the invention to work properly the loudspeaker system is designed so that the front radiating sound source provided by a front loudspeaker and a horn that has a relatively same sound wave path length from the front loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn as compared to the sound wave path length from the rear loudspeaker of the rear radiating sound source to the mouth of the horn of the front loudspeaker. The loudspeaker system can also have two or more front radiating sources and/or two or more rear radiating sources. In these cases at least one front radiating source has a relatively same sound wave path length as at least one sound wave path length from the rear loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn in the front of the loudspeaker.
In the loudspeaker system of the invention the higher acoustic output and increased directional output characters are obtained so that the sound waves radiating from front radiating source and the rear radiating source are summed in a special way.
Because the length of the both sound wave paths from the front loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn and from the rear loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn are same, the both sound waves reach the mouth of the horn in front of the loudspeaker system at the same time and will be summed. Essential in the summing is that because the both sound waves have the same phase they will provide a higher acoustic output and will increase directional output character to the loudspeaker system.
In the loudspeaker system of the invention the length of sound wave path from the front loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn and the sound wave path from the rear loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn are designed to be ¼th of the average wavelength of the bass region. The average wavelength of the bass region is usually in the range of 100 Hz-30 Hz and so the ¼th of the average wavelength is between 0.75 m and 2.5 m. If the enclosure or enclosures in the loudspeaker system are designed so that the length of both sound wave paths are between 1 m and 2 m, the acoustic output between the wavelengths of 75 Hz and 37 Hz in the bass region will be increased.
Essential in the invention is also that the sound wave from the front speaker will travel first through the horn to the mouth of the horn in front of the loudspeaker system and then further to the rear loudspeaker of the loudspeaker system. Because the length of the sound wave path from the front loudspeaker to the mouth of the horn is ¼th of the average wavelength of the bass region and the length of sound wave path from the mouth of the horn to the the rear loudspeaker is also the same ¼th of the average wavelength of the bass region, the total distance for the sound wave from the front loudspeaker to the rear loudspeaker is ½th of the average wavelength.
When the sound wave from the front loudspeaker reaches the rear loudspeaker the sound wave from the front loudspeaker and sound wave from the rear loudspeaker will be summed, Because the sound wave from the front loudspeaker has travelled ½th of the average wavelength of the bass region it is delayed so much that the sound wave from the front loudspeaker and sound wave from the rear loudspeaker are 180° out of phase causing sound cancellation of the rear loudspeaker and increasing the directional radiating character of the front loudspeaker.
To have both sound waves sum correctly In the loudspeaker system of the invention in front of the loudspeaker system it is necessary to have the same 4th order high-pass transfer function for both loudspeaker enclosures, more accurately, a horn-loaded or a vented high-pass enclosure. In the loudspeaker system of the invention the front loudspeaker enclosure is a horn-loaded enclosure and the rear enclosure is a vented high-pass enclosure having at least one vent. Directional character is accomplished by the distance the sound waves have to travel being ¼th of the average wavelength of the bass region, in general 1-2 m. In this case the maximum sound cancellation of the rear loudspeaker happens approximately between 85 Hz and 42 Hz when the front sound wave being travelled ½th of the average wavelength of the bass region to the rear loudspeaker. The sound wave of the rear loudspeaker is having a slightly reduced cancellation of 3-6 dB in the range of 100 Hz-30 Hz depending on the design and the outer dimensions of the enclosure.
Multiple ways of influencing the radiation pattern of the complete sound system by changing the placement of vents and loudspeakers in the rear loudspeaker enclosure are also possible.
Unlike the sound wave produced by a horn-loaded loudspeaker, a vented high-pass enclosure produces a sound wave which is a combination of two frequency parts; a lower part which is radiated through at least one vent and a higher part which is radiated through the loudspeaker. As a result, two variables are possible when comparing the propagation difference of the rear loudspeaker enclosure to the front loudspeaker enclosure.
By using two loudspeakers for the rear loudspeaker enclosure and placing them to the side walls of the loudspeaker enclosure, the propagation difference shortens and raises the cancellation frequency to a higher frequency range. Accordingly, by using two vents for the rear loudspeaker enclosure and placing them into the side walls the propagation difference shortens and raises the lower part of the cancellation frequency to a higher frequency range. More variables such as a combination of the two choices mentioned above are also possible.
As a practical result of the acoustically created propagation delay, both sound sources, the front loudspeaker enclosure and the rear loudspeaker enclosure, can be driven with the same drive signal and using the same amplifier channel making the whole sound system more practical and economical for the user. It is also possible to drive each enclosure separately making it possible to vary the output power of each loudspeaker. Accordingly, using only one amplifier channel but loudspeakers with different nominal impedances can be used to vary the output power of each enclosure.
Multiple loudspeakers can also be used in one or more front loudspeaker enclosures and in one or more rear loudspeaker enclosures. The result of that can create more or less attenuation and less amplifier power may be needed, which adds an economical tool for the user and system designer. For example, almost a double sound pressure level can be achieved to the front side of the loudspeaker system with less attenuation to the rear side of the loudspeaker system by using two horn-loaded front loudspeaker enclosures and one rear loudspeaker enclosure with ¾th total amplifier power.
The invention is hereby illustrated with reference to the drawings. It is noted that in the drawings, which represent different embodiments of the invention, the same reference characters represent the same part of the loudspeaker system of the invention.
In the loudspeaker system of
In the loudspeaker system of
A loudspeaker system according to the invention comprises a front loudspeaker enclosure having at least one front loudspeaker, the front loudspeaker enclosure having a closed rear wall; and a rear loudspeaker enclosure arranged at the rear wall of the front loudspeaker enclosure, the rear loudspeaker enclosure having at least one second loudspeaker, wherein in the loudspeaker system the front loudspeaker enclosure is in the form of a horn-loaded enclosure and the rear loudspeaker enclosure is a single chamber vented high-pass enclosure.
The impulse and phase responses of the sound source formed by the front loudspeaker enclosure and the rear loudspeaker essentially match. The front loudspeaker and the second loudspeaker are operated by the same drive signal. The vents in the second loudspeaker enclosure can be located in the side walls of the loudspeaker system. The second loudspeakers in the rear loudspeaker enclosure can be located in the side walls of the loudspeaker system.
There can be multiple front loudspeakers in the front loudspeaker enclosure and multiple loudspeakers and/or multiple vents in the rear loudspeaker enclosure. The front loudspeaker enclosure and the rear loudspeaker enclosure can be separate units, which form a loudspeaker system when the enclosures are stacked and/or placed against each other. In the loudspeaker system there are one or more separate front loudspeaker enclosure units and one or more separate rear loudspeaker enclosure units, which are stacked and/or placed against each other to form one unit. The front loudspeaker and the second loudspeaker can also be operated by two drive signals and/or two amplifiers.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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20160080 | Apr 2016 | FI | national |
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3131783 | Mares | May 1964 | A |
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4348549 | Berlant | Sep 1982 | A |
5073945 | Kageyama | Dec 1991 | A |
8842866 | Christner | Sep 2014 | B2 |
20050178611 | Noselli et al. | Aug 2005 | A1 |
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20170094404 | Ekedahl | Mar 2017 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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0500294 | Feb 1992 | EP |
Entry |
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Office Action dated Nov. 9, 2016 in FI Patent Application No. 20160080. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20170289675 A1 | Oct 2017 | US |