Speaker Structure with a Loading Hole
20180007464 · 2018-01-04
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
This invention discloses a kind of speaker structure with a loading hole. A characteristic is that it includes an active cavity that has a cone hole and a loading hole; a loudspeaker is sealed and secured on the said cone hole; the said active cavity is connected to the outside air through the said loading hole; the cone of the said loudspeaker has one side which is connected to the free space; another characteristic of this invention is that it includes a driven cavity that is connected to the said active cavity through the said loading hole; the cross-sectional area of the said loading hole is smaller than the cross-sectional area of the air passage on its either side; further, it is not larger than ⅔ the effective area of all the vibration units in the said active cavity; also, the volume of the said active cavity does not exceed half the total volume of the said active cavity and driven cavity. The loading hole constitutes a loading component which improves the transient response of the speaker body. To a great extent, it solves the contradiction between frequency response and transient effect at low sound frequencies. It lowers the requirements for the loudspeaker and simultaneously allows the frequency response and transient effect for the entire system at low sound frequencies to be handled relatively independently. This causes the loudspeaker cost to be reduced.
Claims
1. A speaker structure with a loading hole comprising: an active cavity, which includes a cone hole and a loading hole wherein a loudspeaker is sealed and secured on the said cone hole; the active cavity is connected to outside air through the loading hole, wherein a cone of the loudspeaker has one side connected to free space; and a driven cavity connected to the active cavity through the loading hole, wherein a cross-sectional area of the loading hole is smaller than a cross-sectional area of the outside air connection, wherein the active cavity is not larger than ⅔ the effective area of the vibration units in the active cavity and wherein, the volume of the active cavity does not exceed half the total volume of a combination of the active cavity and the driven cavity.
2. The speaker structure with the loading hole of claim 1, wherein a partition board is between the said active cavity and driven cavity, the loading hole is located on the partition board; and the cross-sectional area of the loading hole is smaller than the cross-sectional area of the partition board between the active cavity and driven cavity.
3. The speaker structure with the loading hole of claim 1, a wherein the active cavity has a cone hole.
4. The speaker structure with the loading hole of claim 1, wherein the vibration units include a cone and passive diaphragms of the loudspeaker; the active cavity also includes at least one diaphragm hole; said passive diaphragm is respectively secured on each said diaphragm; and the passive diaphragms and said active cavity are kept sealed.
5. The speaker structure with the loading hole of claim 1, wherein the active cavity has a buffer tube connected to it, an inner wall of the buffer tube gradually shrinks and stretches into the driven cavity starting from the active cavity, the inner wall of the buffer tube at its end continues to stretch while gradually expanding to form a speaker tube, and the loading hole is located where the speaker tube and the buffer tube connect.
6. The speaker structure with the loading hole of claim 1, wherein the driven cavity is a sealed type and apart from an internal space connected to the loading hole, the driving cavity is kept sealed.
7. The speaker structure with the loading hole of claim 1, wherein the driven cavity is a phase inversion type; and apart from an internal space connected to the loading hole, the driving cavity is connected to the free space through an internal phase inverter tube.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF ATTACHED DIAGRAMS
[0018] The following diagrams and embodiments provide further explanation for this invention:
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
Embodiment 1
[0023] As shown in
[0024] In this embodiment, the volume of active cavity 10 is ⅓ the volume of driven cavity 20. The cross-sectional area of loading hole 12 is ⅔ the cone area of loudspeaker 13. It is smaller than the cross-sectional area of the air passage on its either side.
[0025] And so, when the cone of loudspeaker 13 vibrates in its capacity as the sole vibration unit of this embodiment, the air within active cavity 10 becomes the load of its cone rear and returns to between active cavity 10 and driven cavity 20 through loading hole 12. Loading hole 12 is smaller than the cross-sectional area of the air passage on its either side. This strengthens the resistance to air flow and causes appropriate flow interference. It constitutes a loading component which improves the transient response of the speaker body. This causes the transient response of the entire speaker body to be no longer unconstrained by loudspeaker 13, particularly at low sound frequencies. Therefore, by setting the frequency response of loudspeaker 13 itself and setting the transient effect using loading hole 12, the constraint factors for frequency response and transient effect are separated for low sound frequencies. To a great extent, this solves the contradiction between frequency response and transient effect at low sound frequencies. It lowers the cone requirements for loudspeaker 13 and simultaneously allows the frequency response and transient effect for the entire system at low sound frequencies to be handled relatively independently. This causes the loudspeaker cost to be reduced. Driven cavity 20 of this embodiment is a sealed type. Apart from loading hole 12 that is connected to active cavity 10, the rest of its parts are kept sealed. It is suitable for the design of a sealed type speaker.
Embodiment 2
[0026] As shown in
[0027] There is a cone hole 11 on active cavity 10 and loudspeaker 13 is similarly secured using the back loading method. However for the entire active cavity 10, apart from the cone of loudspeaker 13, there are still two passive diaphragms 15 jointly functioning as vibration units. Each passive diaphragm 15 is secured on diaphragm hole 14 and kept sealed with the active cavity. In this embodiment, the cross-sectional area of loading hole 12 is ¼ the cross-sectional area of all the vibration units i.e. the cone of loudspeaker 13 and all the passive diaphragms 15.
[0028] This embodiment is suitable for the design of the phase inversion type speaker body. Relative to embodiment 1, passive diaphragms 15 are included in active cavity 10 to achieve high quality phase inversion as well as improve sound effects at low frequencies; at the same time, the phase inverter tube of driven cavity 20 also causes high quality phase inversion. Other than handling the frequency response and transient effect separately, the frequency response at low sound frequencies is also very prominent for the entire speaker body; at the same time, the frequency response at low sound frequencies can be enhanced by passive diaphragms 15 and phase inverter tube 21. This further lowers the requirements for loudspeaker 13.
Embodiment 3
[0029] As per
Embodiment 4
[0030] As per
[0031] The description above only covers the preferred embodiments of this invention and it is not meant to limit its implementation scope i.e. any equivalent changes or modifications made within the patent scope of this invention or based on its specification content should all fall within the scope of this invention.