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Acceleration in Speaker Design

Just as high-performance vehicles must articulate the road ahead through acceleration and cornering, loudspeakers must closely track the complexity of music waveforms. But how much priority is really given to acceleration in speaker component selection? Since articulation is key in the midrange band let’s examine the acceleration capabilities of a number of midrange speakers found in high-end speakers.

Below is the calculated air volume acceleration (AVA) of these eight premium transducers.

AVA = motor assembly force product (BL) divided by moving mass (MMS) multiplied by effective cone area (SD)

Acceleration Chart comparing Legacy speakers with others.

The top three drivers listed are used in Legacy speaker designs. You might recognize the other five esteemed drivers as they are found in numerous high-end designs.

Obviously Legacy speaker designs greatly emphasize the importance of acceleration with typically four times he acceleration volume of competitors.

AVA is directly linked to efficiency, dynamics and transient waveform tracing. This theme carries through the treble region with the dual AMT ribbon arrangement providing sixteen times the air volume displacement of a 1” dome tweeter.

Legacy Audio AMT Dual Tweeter

The pleated Kapton diaphragms of each AMT host conductive ribbon traces up and down each fold and employ powerful neodymium magnets to forcefully squeeze the air for much greater acceleration.

Parameters of a Truly Great Loudspeaker:

  • Full Frequency Spectrum
  • 24-bit Dynamics
  • Time Coherence
  • Natural Timbre
  • Transparent Clarity
  • Spatial Realism
  • Directional Control
  • Room Adaptability

See the full article, “Raising The Bar on Speaker Performance: A Loudspeaker Designer’s Perspective” by Legacy Audio’s Chief Designer, Bill Dudleston, on Secrets of Home Theater & High Fidelity.

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