I have only seen pictures of 2 'snail-shaped' speakers so far - the Nautilus from B&W, and a DIY called the Ammonit at speakerbuilding.com.
Does anyone know if a snail acts like a straight-out sealed enclosure (that just looks different), or do they have other properties that are not so obvious? It would certainly look interesting.
Does anyone know if a snail acts like a straight-out sealed enclosure (that just looks different), or do they have other properties that are not so obvious? It would certainly look interesting.
It's a terminated transmission line.
The curly aspect tends to reduce resonances, but as a well-built transmission line doesn't have much in the way of resonances anyway, its main claim to fame is that it looks weird.
Grey
The curly aspect tends to reduce resonances, but as a well-built transmission line doesn't have much in the way of resonances anyway, its main claim to fame is that it looks weird.
Grey
I thing that the concept behind the 'snail' is a closed transmission line.
The idea is to keep the rear emission of the speaker totally under control, by 'killing' all soundwaves within the box before they reflect and return to hit the speaker's diaphgram.
The cost is a big volume and, like a sealed box, the total loss of the rear emission (that is instead tuned and used as bass reinforcement in the classic open TL)
The snail shape is probably the 'best way of bending' the transmission line, in order to optimize the space occupied and avoid sharp angles in the line.
bye
sandro
The idea is to keep the rear emission of the speaker totally under control, by 'killing' all soundwaves within the box before they reflect and return to hit the speaker's diaphgram.
The cost is a big volume and, like a sealed box, the total loss of the rear emission (that is instead tuned and used as bass reinforcement in the classic open TL)
The snail shape is probably the 'best way of bending' the transmission line, in order to optimize the space occupied and avoid sharp angles in the line.
bye
sandro
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