The present invention relates to loudspeakers having horns which project sound and which occupy a compact space, so as to be suitable for installation in an emergency vehicle. A loudspeaker according to the invention projects high intensity sound, providing warning signals in the form of message or siren signals outwardly from the vehicle. The sound is projected with desired frequency response and propagation characteristics in that the loudspeaker carries the sound generated by a driver over a plurality of paths, each of which defines a horn, and from the outputs of which paths the sound combines in phase thereby projecting the sound having the desired frequency response in a desired radiation pattern at high intensity.
Emergency vehicles such as police cars and motorcycles require sirens which project high intensity warning signals from the vehicle. Such sirens may also be used as loud speakers to send audible messages from the emergency vehicle. The space in the emergency vehicles is limited and it is desirable to locate such sirens behind the grill at the front of the vehicle as illustrated in Beltran (U.S. Pat. No. 5,970,158, issued Oct. 19, 1999), or in the case of a motorcycle on a bumper or fender thereof. The sound is produced by a speaker driver, which may have a voice coil connected to a piston, which is vibrated by electrical signals corresponding to the warning signals such as the siren or messages (e.g., announcements) to be projected. Such drivers are shown for example in the above cited Beltran patent and in Bader (U.S. Pat. No. 4,893,343 issued Jan. 9, 1990) and Ford et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 5,804,774 issued Sep. 8, 1998). In order to intensify the sound from the driver, horns have been formed into which the speaker driver projects its sound, such horns sometimes receive sound from the speaker drivers through spiral passageways, as shown for example in Ko et al. (U.S. Pat. No. 4,689,609, issued Aug. 25, 1987), and Lin (U.S. Pat. No. 6,127,918, issued Oct. 3, 2000). The problem remains to provide siren loudspeakers for projecting sound having desired frequency response characteristics at high intensity and in radiation patterns extending outwardly, which satisfy Society of Automotive Engineer (SAE) specifications for siren loudspeakers, and especially which are sufficiently small and compact to facilitate installation thereof in limited spaces afforded in emergency vehicles.
Accordingly, it is a principal feature of the present invention to provide an improved compact, horn loudspeaker.
It is a further feature of the present invention to provide an improved horn loudspeaker especially adapted for use in emergency vehicles, as a siren or other warning signal or audible announcement projector, which achieves high intensity sound in a desired radiation pattern from a compact space.
It is a still further feature of the present invention to provide an improved horn speaker which may be assembled from fewer parts than is the case in existing horn speaker designs, and especially where the parts may be principally of plastic materials and where the assembly of the parts may be carried out readily and at low manufacturing cost.
It is a feature of the invention to provide an improved loudspeaker which is an assembly including a speaker driver, a support for the speaker driver and a chamber in which the sound from the speaker driver travels outwardly in a plurality of cyclonic paths to passageways in the driver support surrounding the driver so that they combine at exit ports of the passageways in reinforcing relationship thereby providing a plurality of horns which handle the sound, in a compact space.
Briefly described, an improved loudspeaker provided by the invention utilizes a structure providing a support member which both supports a driver unit and has a plurality of horn passageways around the driver unit from which the sound leaves at exit ports in phase and therefor in reinforcing relationship to produce high intensity siren and other warning signal sound, such as announcements or other messages. The horns may be fed from a plurality of pathways in a chamber attached to or part of the support member. These pathways may be defined by a plurality of spiral, cyclonic passageways into input ends of which the sound from the driver unit is projected and separates into the plurality of spiral passageways which leave at the outlets of the passageways in circumferential spaced relationship so as to feed sound into corresponding ones of the horn passageways in the support member. The chamber and spiral passageways thereof may be provided by a molded plastic part. A housing having the horn passageways may also be a plastic part.
In accordance with some embodiments of the invention, the chamber with the cyclonic pathways may be closed off and connected to the support member by gaskets and a plate having openings corresponding in shape to the sound receiving, inlet ends of the horn passageways. The horn passageways are sealed by the gaskets.
In accordance with another embodiment of the invention, the support member provides the chamber with the spiral passageways at one end thereof which passageways communicate with the horn passageways having the exit ports at the opposite end of the support member. The support member is provided by a cup having a closed base with an opening therein. The driver unit is received inside the cup to project sound through the opening. A housing surrounding the cup defines, with the outside of the base of the cup, the chamber with the spiral passageways. The housing also defines the horn passageways with the outside of the cup. The housing and the cup form ducts which provide the horn passageways and the spiral passageways. The cup and the housing may be of plastic material connected in sealing relationship with sealing material to provide an integrated support member.
Openings may be provided in the support member for the passage of water, for example from snow falling on the assembled loudspeaker which falls into the passageways in the support member and is melted by heat generated by the driver. The support member provides the passageways carrying the sound produced by the driver. The sound produced by the driver passes through the horn passageways and is recombined so that the sound from each passageway recombines in reinforcing relationship and projects outwardly from the exit ports of the passageways. The support member, therefore, may be called a recombiner. Since the passageways provide extended horns and are afforded in the recombiner the horn speaker provided by the invention may be of compact size, and nevertheless projects sound in a desired radiation pattern.
The foregoing in other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will become more apparent through a reading of the following description in connection with the accompanying drawings in which;
Referring to
A central block off plate is provided by a blocking disc 14 (see especially
The recombiner 8 is also shown in
Circumferentially, angularly offset apart by 90° are four tapered passageways 40, these passageways are generally oblong in cross section and are disposed between the inside periphery 8d and the outside periphery 8e of the support member recombiner 8. The passageways have smooth arcuate surfaces defined by the walls thereof. Larger diameter and smaller diameter curved walls 42 and 44 are at opposite ends of the cross section of the passageways. The outside surfaces 46 of the passageways 40 are segments of a circle along the cross sections thereof. The inside surfaces 48 form two arcs and are generally scalloped in cross section. The shape of the exit ends or ports 1 and their angular offset determines the radiation pattern of the projecting sound. In the illustrated horn speakers, the shape of all the exit ports are alike and they have the same spacing, thereby providing a symmetrical or generally conical pattern.
The passageways 40 taper inwardly or decrease in cross section from their exit ports 1 to their bottom openings 50. In other words, the passageways expand as shown by the tapered portion of their wall 23 near the larger diameter curve ends thereof. Accordingly, the passageways 40 expand from the bottom to the top thereof at the exit end of the port member combiner and are therefore generally horn shaped. The shape of the walls and the top and bottom openings 1 and 50 of each of the passageways 40 are identical in shape. These shapes control the frequency response characteristics of the loudspeaker thereby avoiding distortion of the sound which passes through these passageways 40 to exit ports 1. The phase of the sound through each of the passageways is identical. Accordingly, the sound recombines so as to be projected in a direction away from the exit ports 1. The radiation pattern of the sound is also determines in part by the shape of the passageways 40 and particularly the shape of the exit port openings 1. The radiation pattern may be altered by changing the shape of the passageways and particularly the cross sections thereof.
The support member recombiner 8 may be molded from plastic materials, such as a high strength plastic suitably a polycarbonate plastic. In the course of molding in order to save plastic resin and to reduce the weight of the assembly, core out holes 22 may be provided between the passageways 40. Ears 9 for attaching the assembled loudspeaker driver project from the exterior wall, for mounting the entire horn loudspeaker assembly in an emergency vehicle or elsewhere where desired. The shape of the assembly may be enhanced by aesthetic fins which may be placed at 26 (See
The gasket 12 has through ports 4 of the same shape as the openings 50 at the bottom of the support member recombiner 8. Similar ports 13 are in the blockoff disc 14. The alignment of these ports 4 and 13 is facilitated by the orientation key 5.
The rear or bottom of the horn loudspeaker is provided by a cup shape chamber 19. This chamber has the cyclonic plenums 20 formed therein. The surface and upper edge of ribs forming the cyclonic plenums, which are four in number corresponding to the four horn passageways 40, have their upper edges in approximately the same plane indicated at the surface 52. See also
The entire horn loudspeaker is assembled with main screw fasteners 21 which extend through holes 60 in the rear chamber which are diametrically opposite to each other, and through diametrically opposite holes 64 in the blocking disc plate 14 and the gaskets 12 and 17. The fasteners 21 engage threaded inserts 2 which are placed in the bottom of the support member, recombiner 8 adjacent to the core outs 22. An alignment pin 31 projecting from the surface 52 extends to an alignment hole 31a in the gasket 17 and a similar hole 31a in the blockoff plate 14. Since the openings 50 at the bottom of the passageways 40 and the openings 13 in the blocking disc 14 and openings 4 in the gasket 12 are all aligned with each other due to the use of the orientation key 5 and alignment pins 31, the entire horn loudspeaker will be readily assembled with the rear chamber 19 having the plenums 20. The rear chamber 19 may be a molded plastic part of the same plastic material as the support member recombiner 8.
The plenums 20 are each expanding horns having sound reflective surfaces 28 which direct the sound into the passageways 40 via the ports in the gaskets 12 and 17 and the ports 13 in the blocking disc 14. The output piston 11a of the driver 11 is aligned with throats 16 in the blockoff disc 14. The center of this throat, and of a corresponding hole in the rear chamber gasket 17, is disposed along the vertical axis of the horn loudspeaker, this axis is indicated by the line 100 in
Accordingly, the cyclonic plenums are angularly displaced, circumferentially around the axis 100 (90° apart) until they reach the reflective surfaces 28 which are 90° apart as best shown in
Referring to
The feature of the embodiment of the loudspeaker shown in the
Only one gasket 78 is used to sealingly connect the plenum chamber 19 to the recombiner support 70, this gasket has an opening 80 with its center along the axis 100 through which the sound from the driver piston 11 a enters the center of the plenum chambers 20. Screws 21 similar to those used in the embodiment shown in
The driver is connected by screws 84 which engage threaded holes in the driver after passing through bosses 86 in the bottom plate or disk 74 of the recombiner support 70. The wiring from the driver exits through a notch 82 (
The loudspeaker shown in
Referring to
The housing has horn passageways 116 provided by ducts open at exit ports 118. Extensions of these ducts in the base of the housing 106 provide the spiral passageways or cyclonic plenum of the loudspeaker. These passageways merge into a cylindrical stub sound receiving region 122 below an opening 124 in the base of the cup 104. The vibrating diaphragm of the loudspeaker 108 is positioned adjacent this opening and projects sound into the chamber 122 where it is distributed to the spiral passageways provided by the extensions of the ducts in the base of the housing 108. The ducts in the horn sections around the wall of the cup 104, increase in area thereby providing the horn passageways. The spiral passageways at the base also increase in area to effectively extend the length of the horn passageways much in the same way as the passages in the cyclonic plenum of the chamber shown in the embodiments of
There are regions 126, between the ducts 116, which conform to the cup. These regions taper downwardly from the exit end 128 of the housing 106. The cup and the housing fit together in these regions 126. A sealant or gasket material extending over these regions connects the cup 104 and the housing 106 in sealed relationship. Accordingly, the housing and the outside wall of the base and side of the cup form, with the housing 106, the ducts which provide the passages 116. A suitable sealant material may be a silicone glazing sealant, for example, sold under the trade name Boss by Accumetric, of Elizabethtown, Ky., USA.
To connect the driver 108 and the support member provided by the cup 104 and the housing 106 in assembled relationship with the screws 110, bosses 130 extend downwardly and outwardly from the housing 106 (see especially
The wiring to the driver 108 is connected to terminals 140 (see
The loudspeaker 102 has fewer parts than the speakers illustrated in connection with
From the foregoing description, it will be apparent that there has been provided an improved loudspeaker, and particularly a horn loudspeaker especially suitable for use in emergency vehicles to project siren and other warning signals and other announcements. Variations and modifications in the herein described horn loudspeaker within the scope of the invention will undoubtedly become apparent to those skilled in the art. Accordingly, the foregoing description should be taken as illustrative and not in a limiting sense.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
4689609 | Ko et al. | Aug 1987 | A |
4790020 | Lin | Dec 1988 | A |
4847590 | Gosswiller | Jul 1989 | A |
4893343 | Bader | Jan 1990 | A |
4963855 | Kojima | Oct 1990 | A |
4975965 | Adamson | Dec 1990 | A |
5804774 | Ford et al. | Sep 1998 | A |
5970158 | Beltran | Oct 1999 | A |
6127918 | Lin | Oct 2000 | A |
D453306 | Bekasi | Feb 2002 | S |
6516076 | Marlin | Feb 2003 | B1 |
D513200 | Lai | Dec 2005 | S |
D514010 | Corrigan | Jan 2006 | S |
D514466 | Lai | Feb 2006 | S |
D514973 | Coward | Feb 2006 | S |
D516448 | Lai | Mar 2006 | S |
D518023 | Miller | Mar 2006 | S |
7617794 | Chlystek | Nov 2009 | B2 |
20050276432 | Hsieh | Dec 2005 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20100189295 A1 | Jul 2010 | US |