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  2. Plasma speaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plasma_speaker

    Additionally, speaker cones will eventually suffer tensile fatigue from the repeated shaking of sonic vibration. [6] Thus conventional speaker output, or the fidelity of the device, is distorted by physical limitations inherent in its design. These distortions have long been the limiting factor in commercial reproduction of strong high frequencies.

  3. Leslie speaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leslie_speaker

    The speaker is named after its inventor, Donald Leslie, who began working in the late 1930s to get a speaker for a Hammond organ that better emulated a pipe or theatre organ, and discovered that baffles rotating along the axis of the speaker cone gave the best sound effect. Hammond was not interested in marketing or selling the speakers, so ...

  4. Electrostatic loudspeaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrostatic_loudspeaker

    Schematic showing an electrostatic speaker's construction and its connections. The thickness of the diaphragm and grids has been exaggerated for the purpose of illustration. An electrostatic loudspeaker (ESL) is a loudspeaker design in which sound is generated by the force exerted on a membrane suspended in an electrostatic field .

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  6. Loudspeaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudspeaker

    The term loudspeaker may refer to individual transducers (also known as drivers) or to complete speaker systems consisting of an enclosure and one or more drivers.. To adequately and accurately reproduce a wide range of frequencies with even coverage, most loudspeaker systems employ more than one driver, particularly for higher sound pressure level (SPL) or maximum accuracy.

  7. Steve Woodmore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Woodmore

    Being the fastest English speaker in the world Stephen Peter Woodmore (13 December 1959 – 6 February 2023) was a British electronics salesman known for his rapid speech articulation, being able to articulate 637 words per minute (wpm), a speed four times faster than the average person.

  8. Directional sound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Directional_sound

    Sound from an array spreads less than sound from a point source, by the Huygens–Fresnel principle applied to diffraction.. While a large loudspeaker is naturally more directional because of its large size, a source with equivalent directivity can be made by utilizing an array of traditional small loudspeakers, all driven together in-phase.

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