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Jumat, 24 Februari 2012

Raipuru Woofer

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Jeff Rowland


Jeff Rowland,brand yang tidak asing di telinga pecinta audio. Karya2 om Jeff ini jadi salah satu favorit saya karena desainnya yang keren, rapi, enak diliat pokoknya.
Yuk ngintip proses pembuatan ampli2 Jeff rowland:














Beberapa produk Jeff Rowland dengan ciri khasnya panel depan alumunium metalik:












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Senin, 13 Februari 2012

BOSE Speaker

Sempet heran waktu ke stand BOSE melihat harganya, untuk speaker dengan dimensi sekecil "itu". Setelah uji dengar ternyata emang lumayan bagus, menurut saya BOSE adalah speaker yang out of performance, jarang2 denger speaker mungil bersuara sperti itu, terutama repro nada rendah-nya. Setelah melihat katalog produknya, ternyata rahasia dibalik speaker mungil tersebut adalah pada desain box-nya (box enclosure)--->tentunya diimbangi dengan kualitas drivernya juga.

 Hampir semua box speaker BOSE menggunakan desain sperti diatas ( Labyrinth-->transmision line).
Apa itu Transmision line?
A perfect transmission line enclosure has an infinitely long line, stuffed with absorbent material such that all the rear radiation of the driver is fully absorbed, down to the lowest frequencies. Theoretically, the vent at the far end could be closed or open with no difference in performance. The density of and material used for the stuffing is critical, as too much stuffing will cause reflections due to back-pressure, whilst insufficient stuffing will allow sound to pass through to the vent. Stuffing often is of different materials and densities close to the cone, and changes as one gets further from the cone.
Consequent to the above, practical Transmission Line loudspeakers are not true Transmission Lines, as there is generally output from the vent at the lowest frequencies. They can be thought of as a waveguide in which the structure shifts the phase of the driver's rear output by at least 90°, thereby reinforcing the frequencies near the driver's Fs. Transmission lines tend to be larger than ported enclosures of approximately comparable performance, due to the size and length of the guide required (typically 1/4 the longest wavelength of interest).
The design is often described as non-resonant, and some designs are sufficiently stuffed with absorbent material that there is indeed not much output from the line's port. But it is the inherent resonance (typically at 1/4 wavelength) that can enhance the bass response in this type of enclosure, albeit with less absorbent stuffing. Among the first examples of this enclosure design approach were the projects published in Wireless World by Bailey in the early 1970s, and the commercial designs of the now defunct IMF Electronics which received critical acclaim at about the same time.
A variation on the transmission line enclosure uses a tapered tube, with the terminus (opening/port) having a smaller area than the throat. The tapering tube can be coiled for lower frequency driver enclosures to reduce the dimensions of the speaker system, resulting in a seashell like appearance. Bose uses similar patented technology on their Wave and Acoustic Waveguide music systems.[6] Bowers & Wilkins have used this approach in their flagship Nautilus speaker as well as smaller straight tapering tubes in many of their other lines. (Wikipedia) 
This enclosure uses a port that is a fraction of a wave length to couple with the woofer.
Pros: Can be built to maximize out put at a particular frequency (SPL purposes)
Cons:  Difficult to build, giant enclosures, easy to blow woofers, not practical unless used for SPL competition, experimental. 



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