This specification describes an improved acoustic waveguide. Acoustic waveguides are described generally in U.S. Pat. No. 4,628,528. Some specific aspects of acoustic waveguides are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,771,787 and in U.S patent application Ser. No. 09/753,167, now U.S. Pat. No. 7,426,280.
In one aspect, a loudspeaker assembly, comprises: an acoustic waveguide; an acoustic driver mounted in the waveguide so that a first surface radiates sound waves into the waveguide so that the sound waves are radiated from the waveguide; and an acoustic volume acoustically coupled to the acoustic waveguide for increasing the amplitude of the sound waves radiated from the acoustic waveguide. The acoustic waveguide may be substantially lossless. The acoustic volume may be for increasing the amplitude of sound waves of a wavelength equal to the effective acoustic length of the waveguide. The acoustic waveguide may have curved walls forming walls of the acoustic volume. The acoustic waveguide may have curved walls forming walls of an acoustic volume acoustically coupled to the acoustic waveguide to increase the acoustic radiation from the waveguide. The acoustic volume may be tear drop shaped. The waveguide walls may form walls of another acoustic volume coupled to the acoustic waveguide. The loudspeaker assembly may further comprise electronic components positioned in the acoustic volume. The loudspeaker assembly may further comprise a coupling volume for acoustically coupling the acoustic waveguide to the acoustic volume and the combination of the coupling volume and the acoustic volume may form a Helmholtz resonator may have a Helmholtz resonance frequency that is outside the operating range of the loudspeaker assembly. The acoustic driver may be mounted so that a second surface of the acoustic driver radiates directly to the environment. The waveguide may comprise multiple curved sections substantially defining the acoustic volume. The acoustic waveguide may substantially define another acoustic volume. The acoustic volume may be teardrop shaped. The waveguide may have an effective acoustic length, and the acoustic volume may have acoustic paths each having a length that is less than 10% of the effective acoustic length of the loudspeaker assembly, or the acoustic paths may have a length that is greater than 10% of the effective acoustic length of the loudspeaker assembly and that is within a range of lengths that does not result in a dip in a frequency response. The acoustic volume may comprise a baffle structure causing the length of an acoustic path to be within the range of lengths. The waveguide may have a substantially constant cross-sectional area. A closed end of the waveguide adjacent the acoustic driver may have a larger cross-sectional area than an open end of the waveguide.
In another aspect, a loudspeaker assembly, comprises: an acoustic driver; an acoustic waveguide with substantially continuous walls acoustically coupled to the acoustic driver so that a first surface of the acoustic driver radiates into the acoustic waveguide and so that the waveguide radiates acoustic radiation from an open end of the waveguide; and the waveguide comprises a structure for increasing the amplitude of the acoustic radiation that is radiated from the open end of the waveguide. The structure for increasing the amplitude may comprise an acoustic volume, acoustically coupled to the acoustic waveguide. The acoustic waveguide may be substantially lossless. The acoustic waveguide may have curved walls forming walls of an acoustic volume acoustically coupled to the acoustic waveguide to increase the acoustic radiation from the waveguide. The acoustic waveguide walls may form walls of a teardrop shaped acoustic volume. The waveguide walls may form walls of another acoustic volume coupled to the acoustic waveguide. The loudspeaker assembly may further include electronic components positioned in the acoustic volume. The loudspeaker assembly may further comprise a coupling volume for acoustically coupling the acoustic waveguide to the acoustic volume; and the combination of the coupling volume and the acoustic volume may form a Helmholtz resonator having a Helmholtz resonance frequency that is outside the operating range of the loudspeaker assembly. The acoustic driver may be mounted so that a second surface of the acoustic driver radiates into the environment. The waveguide may comprise multiple curved sections substantially defining at least one acoustic volume, coupled to the acoustic waveguide. The acoustic waveguide may substantially define another acoustic volume, coupled to the acoustic waveguide. The acoustic volume may be teardrop shaped. The waveguide may have an effective acoustic length; the acoustic volume may have acoustic paths each having a length that is less than 10% of the effective acoustic length of the loudspeaker assembly, or each having a length that is greater than 10% of the effective acoustic length of the loudspeaker assembly and that is within a range of lengths that does not result in a dip in a frequency response. The acoustic volume may comprise a baffle structure causing the length of an acoustic path to be within the range of lengths. The waveguide may have a substantially constant cross-sectional area. The waveguide may have a cross sectional area at a closed end adjacent the acoustic driver than at an open end.
In another aspect, a loudspeaker apparatus comprises an acoustic waveguide and an acoustic driver having a first radiating surface and a second radiating surface, the acoustic driver mounted to the waveguide so that the first surface radiates acoustic energy into the acoustic waveguide so that the acoustic radiation is radiated from the waveguide. The loudspeaker apparatus may be characterized by a cancellation frequency at which radiation from the second surface is out of phase with the radiation from the waveguide, resulting in destructive interference between the radiation from the waveguide and the radiation from the second surface, resulting in a reduction in acoustic output from the loudspeaker apparatus at the cancellation frequency. The loudspeaker apparatus may have an acoustic volume, acoustically coupled to the waveguide to increase the amplitude of the radiation from the waveguide resulting in less reduction in acoustic output from the loudspeaker apparatus at the cancellation frequency.
Other features, objects, and advantages will become apparent from the following detailed description, when read in connection with the following drawing, in which:
The concepts of reducing the cross-sectional area and length of a waveguide and adding a chamber to the waveguide as shown in
The operation of the waveguide assembly of
so that the waveguide of
from the acoustic driver end of the waveguide, a chamber 22 is acoustically coupled to the waveguide through an opening 34. At a distance d2 (where l+βl+l<d2<l+βl+l+βl, in one example
from the acoustic driver end 11 of the waveguide, a chamber 29 is acoustically coupled to the waveguide through an opening 38. Chamber 22 has a volume dimension Vc of A2l(1−β2) so that V′2+Vc=V2, and chamber 29 has a volume dimension VD of A4l(1−β2) so that V′4+Vc=V4, so that the total volume occupied by the assembly of
The opening 34 or 38 may have an area such that it may form, with the chamber 22 or 29, respectively, a Helmholtz resonator which could have adverse acoustic effects on the operation of the waveguide system. Helmholtz resonators are described in, for example, URL www.phys.unsw.edu.au/jw/Helmholtz.html, a copy of which is attached as an appendix. However, the dimensions of the opening 34 and of the chamber 22 can be selected so that the Helmholtz resonance frequency is at a frequency that does not adversely affect the operation of the waveguide system or that is outside the operating frequency range of the waveguide. Selecting dimensions so that the Helmholtz resonance frequency is outside the operating frequency of the waveguide can be done by making the width of openings 34 and 38 to the chambers 22 and 29 respectively, close to (for example >50% of) the width of the chambers.
The tuning of the waveguide 12D of
The figures disclosed above are merely illustrative and not exhaustive and many variations are possible. For example, the waveguide may have more than four sections; sections such as sections 25′ and 27′ may have different lengths; the volume dimensions of sections such as 25′ and 27′ may have different volume dimensions; the combined volume dimensions such as V3 and V4 may not be equal to V2; and as will be seen below, different configurations of the chambers are possible (for example, there may be different numbers of chambers, and the chambers may have different volume dimensions, shapes, and placements along the waveguide as will be described below).
In addition to providing the same tuning frequency with a waveguide of shorter length, the waveguide system of
from the acoustic driver, in one example
and the entrance 34B to chamber 22B is placed at distance d2 such that
from the acoustic driver, in one example
Chamber 29 of
from the acoustic driver, in one example
and the entrance 38B to chamber 29B is placed at distance d4 such that
from the acoustic driver, in one example
The effect of the tuning of the waveguide assembly of chambers 22A and 22B is substantially the same as the effect of chamber 22 of
Aspects of
Generally, it is desirable to configure the chamber so that the lengths of all acoustic paths are significantly shorter than one-fourth of the effective acoustic length of the waveguide 12B. If the length of one of the acoustic paths is not significantly shorter than one fourth (for example, not shorter than 10%) of the effective acoustic length of the waveguide, output dips may occur at certain frequencies. In one example, a waveguide assembly similar to waveguide assembly of
of the effective acoustic length of the waveguide assembly. An undesirable dip in the frequency response may occur at about 200 Hz. Depending on factors such as the distance of the chamber 22 from the closed end 11, the dip in the frequency response may occur when the length of acoustic path 66A is as short as 25.4 cm (10 inches), which is
of the effective acoustic length of waveguide 12B.
One way of eliminating the frequency response dip is to reconfigure chamber 22 so that acoustic path 66A has a length shorter than 10% (in this case 19.6 cm) of the effective acoustic length of the waveguide system. However in a practical waveguide, it may be difficult to reconfigure the chamber so that acoustic path 66A has a length of less than 10% of the effective acoustic length of the waveguide system.
Another way of eliminating the frequency response dip is to add structure to the chamber 22 that changes the length of an acoustic path such as 66A to a length that does not cause a frequency response dip.
The waveguide assembly of
The waveguide assembly of
Other embodiments are in the claims.
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