1. Technical Field of the Invention
This invention relates generally to cooling of audio loudspeakers, and more specifically to an apparatus for extracting heat from an audio loudspeaker cabinet.
2. Background Art
Loudspeaker enclosures may be sealed, as shown, or they may be vented, which is sometimes referred to as ported. A sealed cabinet has essentially zero air exchange with the outside ambient air. Vented cabinets have a hole, generally termed a port, extending through one of the panels. As the speaker driver operates, it pressurizes and depressurizes the cabinet in accordance with the oscillating motion of the driver's diaphragm. In a ported cabinet, this causes some amount of air exchange between the enclosed volume of air and the external ambient air, through the port hole. Most ported cabinets include a tuning duct which is coupled to the port and extends some distance into the enclosed volume. This duct significantly reduces the amount of air exchanged between the enclosed volume and the outside, because it generally results in an oscillating column of air moving back and forth in the duct, with very little opportunity for air inside the enclosed volume to actually pass entirely out the duct and escape to the external air, and vice versa.
In many applications, it is desirable to drive the loudspeaker very hard, to produce high sound pressure levels or loud sound volumes. Speaker drivers can produce large amounts of heat when driven hard. Significant engineering efforts are expended to improve speaker drivers' ability to tolerate heat and to extract heat away from the area of their voice coils, where the heat is produced, in order to increase power handling.
Most audio speaker cabinets are fabricated of materials, such as plywood or medium density fiberboard, which have relatively high thermal resistance. Thus, heat which is produced by the speaker driver tends to build up and remain trapped inside the cabinet. Cabinets could be made more thermally conductive, such as by fabricating them out of aluminum or the like, but materials which offer good thermal conductivity often have unacceptable acoustic properties, high cost, high mass, and/or high manufacturing cost, as compared to the conventionally used materials.
What is needed is a speaker cabinet which provides improved thermal extraction, and which can be manufactured of conventional or otherwise desirable materials.
The invention will be understood more fully from the detailed description given below and from the accompanying drawings of embodiments of the invention which, however, should not be taken to limit the invention to the specific embodiments described, but are for explanation and understanding only.
The chimney is fabricated of a material having greater thermal conductivity than the cabinet, such as aluminum, brass, copper, or even steel. Ideally, the chimney material is also rigid, so it does not flex, compress, or deflect in response to changes in internal pressure within the cabinet when the speaker is being driven. A variety of cross-sectional shapes may be employed, such as square or circular. The circular shape offers the greatest inherent resistance to compression or deflection. Some chimneys may be simple tubes, while others may include, for example, internal cross webs for increased strength. It may, in some applications, be found advantageous to make the tube walls as thin as possible, such as for reducing weight; such internal webs may permit a greater reduction in tube wall thickness within a required level of resistance to compression or deflection. Webs can also increase surface area, improving thermal transfer.
As the enclosed volume of air EV is heated, the heat is readily conducted from the enclosed volume through the material of the chimney, heating the column of air inside the chimney. This causes the column of air to expand, which lowers its density, causing it to rise. The result is a passive, silent cooling solution yielding an upward airflow through the chimney, drawing cool air into the bottom opening, and expelling heated air out the top opening, thereby continuously extracting heat from the chimney, cooling the enclosed volume of air within the cabinet. The greater the temperature differential between the enclosed volume and the external ambient, the faster the heated column of air will rise through the chimney, and the more effective the cooling will be. The cooling is accomplished without moving parts, silently, and without adding any extra energy to the system.
Placing a cylindrical or rounded chimney tube directly behind the loudspeaker has the additional advantage of scattering backwaves and reflected waves in many different directions, significantly reducing any propensity of the cabinet to develop standing waves or patterns.
Is illustrated, the entire chimney itself is not necessarily of monolithic construction. In one embodiment, a portion of the frame serves as a middle portion of the chimney, and two chimney end sections are attached to it.
Many speaker drivers have a generally planar back surface 104, which can readily be placed into direct contact with the planar surface 106 of a rectangular chimney tube, as illustrated. This provides a large surface area of direct contact, and good thermal transfer. It may also be desirable to apply some thermal grease or the like to the mating surfaces, to improve thermal transfer.
In some embodiments, the speaker driver may be placed into contact with the surface of the chimney by carefully dimensioning the chimney and the cabinet, such that when the speaker driver is fastened to the front face 7 of the cabinet, the back of the driver just makes contact with the chimney.
In other embodiments, as illustrated, the chimney itself can be used to secure the speaker driver. In one such embodiment, the chimney is adapted with a threaded bolt 108 which is coaxially aligned with the hole 110 through which the speaker driver is inserted. The threaded bolt can be welded or integral with the chimney, or it can be inserted from inside the chimney through a hole. The back of the speaker driver includes a threaded hole 112 which mates with the threaded bolt. The driver is threaded down with the bolt until the back surface of the driver couples or bottoms firmly against the chimney. In some such embodiments, it may not even be necessary or desirable to fasten the front basket flange of the speaker driver to the panel. Rather, an airtight gasket may be provided, and the basket front mounting flange may cinch down against the gasket. The gasket may advantageously be made of highly damped material. Having the driver decoupled from the panel in this way may in many applications improve the acoustic performance by reducing panel resonance and vibration.
As illustrated, the drivers may be oriented in an opposing, “boxer” configuration, such that they prevent cabinet movement or rocking. The movements of the two respective speaker drivers are in opposition to each other, and cancel out each other's cabinet forces.
The performance of the chimney may, optionally, be enhanced by adding a fan 114 or other active cooling solution. In one such embodiment, the fan is a box fan whose outer dimensions closely match the internal dimensions of the chimney tube, and the fan is inserted inside the chimney so as not to protrude from the cabinet. It may be advantageous in some such applications to locate the fan near the bottom of the tube, such that much of the fan noise is directly absorbed by the carpet (not shown) on which the cabinet rests, and much of the remaining fan noise must travel the entire length of the chimney, which will attenuate the noise, before escaping the top opening of the chimney. The fan may be powered by any suitable means. For example, if the speaker is a powered subwoofer, it will already have an electrical power supply (not shown) from which a small amount of power may be drawn to power the fan.
In some embodiments, such as a powered subwoofer, the local amplifier 116 and/or other heat-generating electronics may be coupled directly to the chimney. They may be coupled to the outside of the chimney, as shown, where they will be in contact with the enclosed volume of air. Or, they may be coupled to the inside of the chimney, where they will be in contact with the rising column of air.
In some such embodiments, the two speaker drivers may exhibit radically different amounts of heating of their respective enclosed air volumes. In some such cases, it may be that the chimney is heated to a temperature which is between the temperatures of the two enclosed volumes. If this happens, the chimney will actually cause additional heating of the cooler of the two enclosed volumes, as heat travels through the material of the chimney, and into the air in the cooler enclosed volume. To prevent this from happening, the portion of the chimney which is in contact with the cooler enclosed air volume may be equipped with insulation 128, such as a foam sleeve as illustrated, to reduce this heating effect.
The chimney includes an interior wall 156 and an exterior wall 158 of e.g. aluminum, which extend more or less parallel to each other, forming a vertical channel through which the column of air rises. The sides of the vertical channel are closed by side walls 160, 162 which are coupled with the interior and exterior walls. An optional flange 164 may be provided to facilitate mounting the chimney to the cabinet.
As the speaker driver is operated and heats the enclosed volume of air EV, the interior wall will conduct the heat to the column of air between the interior and exterior walls. The heated column of air will rise, drawing cool air into the lower opening 166 and expelling heated air out the upper opening 168. The exposed, outer surface of the exterior wall may be used for mounting the local amplifier (not shown) and its controls.
One problem with existing powered subwoofers is that, in many instances, their gain, crossover frequency, phase, etc. control knobs are required to pierce entirely through the plate to which the amplifier is mounted. If the amplifier shares the same volume of air as the speaker driver, and if the holes through which these knobs extend are not adequately sealed, the alternating pressurization of the cabinet caused by the moving diaphragm will cause whistling noise as air rushes in and out of the holes around the knobs. In the present embodiment, the amplifier (not shown) could reside within the thermal chimney, in which case the control knobs will extend only through the outermost wall 158, such that the control knob holes do not extend into the pressurized enclosed volume of air EV. Thus, this invention obviates the need to seal the holes around the knobs.
The various features illustrated in the figures may be combined in many ways, and should not be interpreted as though limited to the specific embodiments in which they were explained and shown. Some loudspeaker cabinets house two or more speaker drivers, some of which may occupy separate enclosed volumes. The invention may be practiced with any number of these separate enclosed volumes. In some applications, the addition of a fan or blower to improve airflow through the chimney may be acceptable, such as in loudspeaker cabinets intended for use in very loud concerts, in which the fan noise will not be perceptible and the increased cooling is desirable.
The chimney tubes may take any suitable shape or size, and be fabricated of any suitable material. The chimney may be directly coupled to the cabinet panels, or there may be an acoustically dampening gasket between the chimney and the cabinet panels.
Those skilled in the art having the benefit of this disclosure will appreciate that many other variations from the foregoing description and drawings may be made within the scope of the present invention. Indeed, the invention is not limited to the details described above. Rather, it is the following claims including any amendments thereto that define the scope of the invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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4210778 | Sakurai et al. | Jul 1980 | A |
4811403 | Henricksen et al. | Mar 1989 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20050169494 A1 | Aug 2005 | US |