tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4348292068036323235.post4796322987727877576..comments2023-08-29T03:53:29.334-07:00Comments on Bones Hi - Fi: Motor Effects of Dynamic Loudspeakers: Stifling Sound Quality?Ringohttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09506068154852505840noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4348292068036323235.post-73037182865864501152008-12-20T04:09:00.000-08:002008-12-20T04:09:00.000-08:00The Audio Engineering Society or AES has since not...The Audio Engineering Society or AES has since noted this problem of widely varying speaker impedance and the back EMF - so called motor effects - as very taxing for whatever power amplifier you have at hand. Conventional box monopole loudspeakers that are representative of the over 95% of commercially manufactured and sold hi-fi loudspeakers - in my humble opinion - has enjoyed decades of rigorous mathematical and / or laboratory scrutiny and analysis. During which enormous amount of theory and computing power - like the Thiel-Small parameters and what have you - have been applied to "tame" what you described as the so-called motor-effects of moving coil loudspeakers. And yet, the motor-effects that you have stated in this particular blog had - to date - been only minimized of it's negative effects on the final sound quality and not fully solved. <BR/>Maybe major hi-fi manufacturing firms should be reintroducing the open-baffle dipole loudspeaker concepts which they popularized during the "Golden Age of Hi-Fi" of the 1950's and 1960's.<BR/>I too agree that better cone materials like the high-definition aerogel introduced during the 1990's or carbon fiber as loudspeaker cone material is certainly a way forward when it comes to sound quality.Letichehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12167766662268885819noreply@blogger.com