Thread: speaker phasing
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William Sommerwerck William Sommerwerck is offline
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Default speaker phasing

"Pat" wrote in message ...

I was away for a while, so this thread is new to me today. Your
comments above make sense, but bring up a question I have had for many
years. I own a pair of ESS AMT Monitor speakers that I purchased new
back in the 80's. Each has a pair of 12" woofers - one active (ie, a
normal speaker) and the other passive. I would think that when the
active one is compressing the air in the cabinet, the passive one
would be pushed out thereby appearing to be out of phase to a
listener. That doesn't appear to be the case because these speaker
have a great low end sound. Can you explain why they work? (I am
just picking you because you seem to know something about the subject,
but others are welcome to explain my misunderstanding as well.)

The passive radiator is not a radiator in the conventional. It "looks like" a
a volume of air with the same mass. In other words, it's used to create a
ducted-port speaker without the tube. (I think this is the correct
explanation.)