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  2. Woofer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woofer

    A woofer or bass speaker is a technical term for a loudspeaker driver designed to produce low frequency sounds, typically from 20 Hz up to a few hundred Hz. The name is from the onomatopoeic English word for a dog's deep bark, "woof" [1] (in contrast to a tweeter, the name used for loudspeakers designed to reproduce high-frequency sounds, deriving from the shrill calls of birds, "tweets").

  3. Loudspeaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudspeaker

    The hole below the lowest woofer is a port for a bass reflex system.. A loudspeaker (commonly referred to as a speaker or, more fully, a speaker system) is a combination of one or more speaker drivers, an enclosure, and electrical connections (possibly including a crossover network).

  4. Subwoofer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subwoofer

    From about 1900 to the 1950s, the "lowest frequency in practical use" in recordings, broadcasting and music playback was 100 Hz. [9] When sound was developed for motion pictures, the basic RCA sound system was a single 8-inch (20 cm) speaker mounted in straight horn, an approach which was deemed unsatisfactory by Hollywood decisionmakers, who hired Western Electric engineers to develop a ...

  5. Electrodynamic speaker driver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrodynamic_speaker_driver

    Some speaker driver designs have provisions to do so (typically termed servomechanisms); these are generally used only in woofers and especially subwoofers, due to the greatly increased cone excursions required at those frequencies in a driver whose cone size is well under the wavelength of some of the sounds it is made to reproduce (ie, bass ...

  6. Rotary woofer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rotary_woofer

    A rotary woofer is a subwoofer-style loudspeaker which reproduces very-low-frequency content by using a conventional speaker voice coil's motion to change the pitch (angle) of the blades of an impeller rotating at a constant speed. The pitch of the fan blades is controlled by the audio signal presented to the voice coil, and is able to swing ...

  7. Mid-range speaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-range_speaker

    When a mid-range speaker is mounted in the same box as a woofer, it will have its own small sub-enclosure, or a sealed back, to prevent the woofer's backwave radiation into the box from affecting the mid-range's cone or dome motion.

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