i saw one of these devices back in the '70's. it consisted of a woofer magnet with a steel plate attached to it rather than a cone. it could be mounted on a surface, such as a floor, that would become a sounding board. the particular one i saw was rated at 250 or 300w. i have been looking for something similar for an idea i have, but the compny that made the one i saw has vanished...... IIRC the name of the company was Planar Sound out of North Carolina and the device was called a Sound Plate.
the company i work for has a speaker reconing shop, and i'm thinking of describing the sound plate to the reconing tech to see if we can make one. if the thing was patented, the patent could be expired by now.......
the company i work for has a speaker reconing shop, and i'm thinking of describing the sound plate to the reconing tech to see if we can make one. if the thing was patented, the patent could be expired by now.......
i found something similar in patent 4514599 with a piston driven by a voice coil, and the piston attaches to a car body to transmit sound.
you mean like these:
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=299-028
or these:
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=300-950
?
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=299-028
or these:
http://www.partsexpress.com/pe/showdetl.cfm?&Partnumber=300-950
?
I worked on a high end home once that had hockey puck transducers on the inside of the sheerock walls, they made the entire sheetrock a "cone" abiet as flat one. They did not have any highs and the mid was not very clear though.
Ron
Ron
Direct excitation of surfaces
unclejed613,
Check this out:
http://www.soundbug.biz/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1879247.stm
There have been "knockers" or "shakers" around for many years. The above is a magnetostictrive variant. It's not hi-fi, but it certainly works.
There is also a system called "Whispering windows" that caused a minor stir in London in 2003 when it was installed in a shop window display in the flagship John Lewis store in Oxford Street:
http://www.whisperingwindows.co.za/
It later showed up in a bank window in Cambridge, and probably elsewhere as well, but that is where I encountered it. Although quiet, it did work, although it seemed not to attract much attention - maybe the naff advertising being "broadcast" on a flat screen TV on the other side of the window wasn't compelling enough...
Paul
unclejed613,
Check this out:
http://www.soundbug.biz/
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1879247.stm
There have been "knockers" or "shakers" around for many years. The above is a magnetostictrive variant. It's not hi-fi, but it certainly works.
There is also a system called "Whispering windows" that caused a minor stir in London in 2003 when it was installed in a shop window display in the flagship John Lewis store in Oxford Street:
http://www.whisperingwindows.co.za/
It later showed up in a bank window in Cambridge, and probably elsewhere as well, but that is where I encountered it. Although quiet, it did work, although it seemed not to attract much attention - maybe the naff advertising being "broadcast" on a flat screen TV on the other side of the window wasn't compelling enough...
Paul
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