Claims
- 1. A loudspeaker, comprising:
a waveguide unit; a plurality of low pass filters where at least one of the low pass filters passes a signal of a frequency lower than the other filters; a plurality of drivers positioned with the waveguide unit where at least one of the plurality of drivers is coupled to the at least one low pass filter that passes a signal of a frequency lower than the other filters and where at least one of the other plurality of drivers is coupled to a low pass filter and a frequency dependent phase delay.
- 2. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the loudspeaker has at least four drivers.
- 3. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where all of the plurality of drivers are coupled to a frequency dependent phase delay device, except for the driver coupled to the at least one low pass filter that passes a mid-range signal of a frequency lower than the other filters.
- 4. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the plurality of drivers are tilted down at a predetermined angle.
- 5. The loudspeaker of claim 4, where the predetermined angle is greater than or approximately equal to five degrees.
- 6. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the frequency dependent phase delay is introduced through the use of an all-pass filter.
- 7. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the frequency dependent phase delay is introduced by a delay line.
- 8. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the plurality of drivers and waveguide unit generate a frequency response from approximately 250 Hz to 1.5 kHz.
- 9. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the plurality of drivers and waveguide unit shapes the vertical polar acoustical response to maintain substantially constant vertical beam-width within a predetermined frequency range.
- 10. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the waveguide unit is designed to generally form a horn for each individual driver such that each driver is internally separated from one another by a generally nosed shaped vane.
- 11. She loudspeaker of claim 10, where the loudspeaker has an upper driver an upper mid-driver, a lower mid-driver and a lower driver and where the waveguide unit separates the upper drivel and upper mid-driver by an upper vane, the upper mid-driver and lower mid-driver by a mid-vane, and the lower mid-driver and lower driver by a lower vane.
- 12. The loudspeaker of claim 11, where the mid-vane extends farther outward toward the front of the loudspeaker than the upper and lower vanes.
- 13. The loudspeaker of claim 1, where the drivers are mid-frequency drivers.
- 14. A method of frequency control of a signal, comprising:
routing the signal to an electrical node; filtering the signal from the electrical node into a plurality of frequency bands, including a lowest frequency band; introducing a frequency dependent phase delay into at least one of the plurality of frequency bands other than the lowest frequency band; directing each of the plurality of frequency bands to a respective driver that generates an audio frequency response for the received frequency band.
- 15. The method of claim 14, further comprising the step of adjusting the audio frequencies generated by the respective driver.
- 16. The method of claim 15, where adjusting the audio frequencies further comprises:
shaping the audio frequency having a frequency range of approximately 250 Hz to approximately 1.5 kHz.
- 17. The method of claim 15, where adjusting the audio frequencies further comprises:
directing the audio frequencies within a predetermined vertical range.
- 18. The method of claim 14, where adjusting the audio frequencies comprises:
changing the amplitude of at least one of the audio frequencies.
- 19. The method of claim 14, further comprises:
generating the audio frequencies at a predetermined axis angle.
- 20. The method of claim 19, where the predetermined design axis angle is greater than or approximately equal to five degrees.
- 21. The method of claim 14, where the frequency dependent phase delay is introduced by filtering the at least one plurality of frequency bands through an all-pass filter.
- 22. The method of claim 14, where the frequency dependent phase delay is introduced through the use of a delay line.
- 23. The method of claim 22, where the predetermined vertical range is 50 degrees.
- 24. A loudspeaker, comprising:
an electrical node in receipt of an electrical signal; a plurality of filters connected to the electrical node that filters the electrical signal into a plurality of filtered electrical signals; a frequency dependent phase delay device for introducing a frequency dependent phase delay into all of the filtered electrical signals except for the filtered electrical signal of the lowest frequency; a plurality of drivers positioned with a waveguide unit, where each of the plurality of drivers receives a filtered electrical signal with a frequency dependent phase delay, except for the driver receiving the filtered electrical signal of the lowest frequency.
- 25. The loudspeaker of claim 24 where each of the drivers is tilted down by a predetermined angle.
- 26. The loudspeaker of claim 24, where each of the drivers is tilted down by at least five degrees.
- 27. The loudspeaker of claim 24 where the predetermined angle is not perpendicular to the face of the waveguide.
- 28. The loudspeaker of claim 24, where the plurality of filters are low pass filters.
- 29. The loudspeaker of claim 24, where the frequency dependent phase delay is caused by an all-pass filter.
- 30. The loudspeaker of claim 24, where the frequency dependent phase delay is caused by a delay line.
- 31. The loudspeaker of claim 24, where the waveguide unit is designed to generally form a horn for each individual driver, such that each driver is internally separated from one another by a generally nosed shaped vane.
- 32. The loudspeaker of claim 24, where the loudspeaker has an upper driver, an upper mid-driver, a lower mid-driver and a lower driver and where the waveguide unit separates the upper driver and upper mid-driver by an upper vane, the upper mid-driver and lower mid-driver by a mid-vane, and the lower mid-driver and lower driver by a lower vane.
- 33. The loudspeaker of claim 31, where the mid-vane extends farther outward toward the front of the loudspeaker than the upper and lower vanes.
- 34. A mid-range array loudspeaker, comprising:
a mid-range waveguide unit configured internally in a general horn shape extending from a vertical sound input plane to a vertical sound output plane where a single sound output port is bounded generally by a front edge region of said midrange loudspeaker module; a plurality of cone-type mid-range loudspeaker units coupled mechanically and acoustically to the mid-range waveguide at the sound input plane; and a multiple throat portion of the mid-range waveguide unit, made and arranged to mount the cone-type mid-range loudspeaker units and to provide each with an individual waveguide throat portion, the throat portions combining and merging into a common main waveguide portion that extends to the output port; the waveguide unit, including the multiple throat portion, being configured, made and arranged to provide an internal cross-sectional air space configurations, taken perpendicular to a central axis thereof, that increases in area, from the sound input plane to the sound output plane, in a manner that acts in conjunction with a designated evolution in the cross-sectional shape to accomplish uniformity of sound coverage.
- 35. The mid-range array loudspeaker of claim 34, where the designated mid-frequency audio range is made to extend from a lower crossover frequency of approximately 250 Hz to an upper crossover frequency of approximately 1.5 kHz.
- 36. The mid-range array loudspeaker of clam 34, where the multiple throat portion is included in a direction that is offset from horizontal by a predetermined angle.
- 37. The mid-range array loudspeaker of claim 36, where the predetermined angle is at least five degrees.
1. CROSS REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/644,611 filed on Aug. 23, 2000. titled IMPROVED MIDRANGE LOUDSPEAKER MODULE FOR CINEMA SCREEN, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Serial No. 60/160,705, filed on Oct. 20, 1999, both of which are incorporated by reference into this application.
Provisional Applications (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
|
60160705 |
Oct 1999 |
US |
Continuations (1)
|
Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09644611 |
Aug 2000 |
US |
Child |
10435988 |
May 2003 |
US |