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| United States Patent | 4888804 |
| Link to this page | http://www.wikipatents.com/4888804.html |
| Inventor(s) | Gefvert; Herbert I. (495 S. Green Bay Rd., Lake Forest, IL 60045) |
| Abstract | A sound reproduction system for providing an enhanced stereophonic image
within an enlarged listening area includes both a left and a right
transducer enclosure, each enclosure having a main transducer array for
receiving an audio channel signal and providing direct reproduction
thereof, the main transducer array being directed into a listening area
and having a dispersion profile which substantially defines the listening
area, a boundary transducer for reproducing a frequency band-limited and
180 degree phase-shifted audio channel signal, the boundary transducer
being directed at an angle of substantially 65 degrees with respect to the
main transducer array, and an expansion transducer for reproducing a
frequency band-limited audio channel signal, the expansion transducer
being directed outwardly from the listening area, with the enclosure being
adapted to provide structural support for the main transducer array, the
boundary transducer and the expansion transducer and to maintain a
predetermined angular relationship therebetween. |
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Title Information  |
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Drawing from US Patent 4888804 |
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Sound reproduction system |
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| Publication Date |
December 19, 1989 |
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Title Information  |
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References  |
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| *references marked with an asterisk below are user-added references |
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U.S. References |
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| | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | Reference | Relevancy | Comments | 4596034 Moncrieff 381/89 Jun,1986 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4586192 Arntson 381/303 Apr,1986 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4569074 Polk 381/304 Feb,1986 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4503553 Davis 381/303 Mar,1985 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4497064 Polk 381/304 Jan,1985 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4489432 Polk 381/304 Dec,1984 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4256922 Gorike 381/308 Mar,1981 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4249037 Dexter 381/308 Feb,1981 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4199658 Iwahara 381/304 Apr,1980 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | 4266092 Barker, III 381/305 Dec,1969 |      Your vote accepted [0 after 0 votes] | | |
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| Market Size |
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Market Review  |
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Technical Review  |
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Claims  |
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I claim:
1. A sound reproduction system for providing a sonic image within a defined
listening area in response to a plurality of audio channel signals, said
system comprising a plurality of transducer enclosure means, each of said
enclosure means having:
main transducer means for receiving one of said audio channel signals and
providing direct reproduction of essentially the entire frequency band
thereof, said main transducer means being directed into the listening area
and having a dispersion profile which substantially defines the listening
area;
boundary transducer means for receiving said one audio channel signal, said
boundary transducer means having means for phase-shifting said one audio
channel signal by 180 degrees and means for limiting the bandwidth of said
one audio signal to a first predetermined range, whereby said boundary
transducer means provides reproduction of a frequency band-limited and 180
degree phase-shifted audio channel signal, said boundary transducer means
being directed at an angle of substantially 65 degrees with respect to
said main transducer means; and
expansion transducer means for receiving said one audio channel signal,
said expansion transducer means having means for limiting the bandwidth of
said one audio channel signal to a second predetermined range, whereby
said expansion transducer means provides reproduction of a frequency
band-limited audio channel signal, said expansion transducer means being
directed outwardly from the listening area;
said enclosure means being adapted to provide structural support for said
main, boundary and expansion transducer means and to maintain a
predetermined angular relationship therebetween.
2. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 1, wherein said main
transducer means comprises a low frequency driver for reproducing low
frequency components of an audio channel signal, a middle frequency driver
for reproducing middle frequency components of an audio channel signal and
a high frequency driver for reproducing high frequency components of an
audio channel signal, whereby substantially the entire human-audible
frequency band of an audio channel signal is reproduced by said main
transducer means.
3. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 1, wherein said first
predetermined range is substantially from 0 to 4000 Hertz, whereby said
boundary transducer means is frequency band-limited to substantially
attenuate components of said 180 degree phase-shifted audio channel signal
above 4000 Hertz.
4. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 1, wherein said second
predetermined range is substantially from 400 to 20,000 Hertz, whereby
said expansion transducer means is frequency band-limited to substantially
reproduce components of said audio channel signal between 400 and 20,000
Hertz.
5. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 1 comprising left
transducer enclosure means for reproducing a left audio channel signal,
and right transducer enclosure means for reproducing a right audio channel
signal, said left and right transducer enclosure means being disposed in a
spaced-apart relationship in front of the listening area.
6. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 5, further comprising
center transducer means having means for summing said left and right audio
channel signals and means for limiting the bandwidth of said summation to
a third predetermined range, whereby said center transducer means
reproduces a frequency band-limited summation of said left and right audio
channel signals, said center transducer means being disposed intermediate
said left and right enclosure means and directed into the listening area.
7. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 6, wherein said summing
means comprises a dual voice coil driver.
8. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 6, wherein said third
predetermined range is substantially from 0 to 1200 Hertz, whereby said
center transducer means is frequency band-limited to substantially
attenuate frequency components of said summation of said left and right
audio channel signals above 1200 Hertz.
9. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 5, further comprising
rear transducer means having means for subtracting said left audio channel
signal from said right audio channel signal and means for limiting the
bandwidth of said subtraction to a fourth predetermined range, whereby
said rear transducer means reproduces a frequency band-limited subtraction
of said left audio channel signal from said right audio channel signal,
said rear transducer means being disposed behind the listening area and
directed into the listening area.
10. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 9, wherein said
subtracting means comprises a dual voice coil driver.
11. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 9, wherein said fourth
predetermined range is substantially from 0 to 1200 Hertz, whereby said
rear transducer means is frequency band-limited to substantially attenuate
frequency components of said subtraction above 1200 Hertz.
12. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 11, further comprising
center transducer means having means for summing said left and right audio
channel signals and means for limiting the bandwidth of said summation to
a range of substantially from 0 to 1200 Hertz, whereby said center
transducer means reproduces a frequency band-limited summation of said
left and right audio channel signals, said center transducer means being
disposed intermediate said left and right transducer enclosure means and
directed into the listening area.
13. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 5, further comprising
left rear transducer means having means for attenuating said left audio
channel signal and means for subtracting said attenuated left audio
channel signal from said right audio channel signal and means for limiting
the bandwidth of said subtraction to a fifth predetermined range, whereby
said left rear transducer means reproduces a frequency band-limited
subtraction of said attenuated left audio channel signal from said right
audio channel signal, and right rear transducer means having means for
attenuating said right audio channel signal and means for subtracting said
left audio channel signal from said attenuated right audio channel signal
and means for limiting the bandwidth of said subtraction to a sixth
predetermined range, whereby said right rear transducer means reproduces a
frequency band-limited subtraction of said left audio channel signal from
said attenuated right audio channel signal, said left rear and right rear
transducer means being disposed behind the listening area and directed
into the listening area.
14. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 13, wherein said
subtracting means of each of said left rear and right rear transducer
means comprises a dual voice coil driver.
15. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 13, wherein said fifth
and sixth predetermined ranges are each substantially from 0 to 1200
Hertz, whereby said left rear and right rear transducer means are
frequency band-limited to substantially attenuate frequency components of
said subtractions above 1200 Hertz.
16. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 15, further comprising
center transducer means having means for summing said left and right audio
channel signals and means for limiting the bandwidth of said summation to
a range of substantially from 0 to 1200 Hertz, whereby said center
transducer means reproduces a frequency band-limited summation of said
left and right audio channel signals, said center transducer means being
disposed intermediate said left and right transducer enclosure means and
directed into the listening area.
17. A sound reproduction system as recited in claim 13, wherein said
attenuating means of each of said left rear and right rear transducer
means attenuates said left and right audio channel signals, respectively,
by 8 decibels.
18. A sound reproduction system for providing a sonic image within a
defined listening area in response to a plurality of audio channel
signals, said system comprising a plurality of transducer enclosure means,
each of said enclosure means having:
main transducer means for receiving one of said audio channel signals and
providing direct reproduction thereof, said main transducer means being
directed into the listening area and having a dispersion profile which
substantially defines the listening area;
boundary transducer means for receiving said one audio channel signal, said
boundary transducer means having means for phase-shifting said one audio
channel signal by 180 degrees and means for limiting the bandwidth of said
signal to a range of substantially from 0 to 4000 Hertz, whereby said
boundary transducer means provides reproduction of a frequency
band-limited and 180 degree phase-shifted audio channel signal, said
boundary transducer means being directed at an angle of substantially 65
degrees with respect to said main transducer means; and
expansion transducer means for receiving said one audio channel signal,
said expansion transducer means having means for limiting the bandwidth of
said one audio channel signal to a range of substantially from 400 to
20,000 Hertz, whereby said expansion transducer means provides
reproduction of a frequency band-limited audio channel signal, said
expansion transducer means being directed outwardly from the listening
area; said enclosure means being adapted to provide structural support for
said main, boundary and expansion transducer means and to maintain a
predetermined angular relationship therebetween.
19. A sound reproduction system for providing a stereophonic image within a
defined listening area in response to left and right audio channel
signals, said system comprising left and right transducer enclosure means
for reproducing the left and right audio channel signals respectively,
said left and right enclosure means being disposed in a spaced-apart
relationship in front of the listening area and adjacent to a wall, each
of said enclosure means having:
main transducer means for receiving one of said audio channel signals and
providing direct reproduction thereof, said main transducer means being
directed into the listening area and having a dispersion profile which
substantially defines the listening area;
boundary transducer means for receiving said one audio channel signal, said
boundary transducer means having means for phase-shifting said one audio
channel signal by 180 degrees and means for limiting the bandwidth of said
signal to a range of substantially from 0 to 4000 Hertz, whereby said
boundary transducer means provides reproduction of a frequency
band-limited and 180 degree phase-shifted audio channel signal, said
boundary transducer means being directed at an angle of substantially 65
degrees with respect to said main transducer means; and
expansion transducer means for receiving said one audio channel signal,
said expansion transducer means having means for limiting the bandwidth of
said one audio channel signal to a range of substantially from 400 to
20,000 Hertz, whereby said expansion transducer means provides
reproduction of a frequency band-limited audio channel signal, said
expansion transducer means being directed outwardly from the listening
area and perpendicularly with respect to the wall;
said enclosure means being adapted to provide structural support for said
main, boundary and expansion transducer means and to maintain a
predetermined angular relationship therebetween. |
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Claims  |
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Description  |
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BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates generally to sound reproduction systems, and
more particularly to multiple channel sound reproduction systems.
Specifically, the present invention provides an improved stereophonic
sound reproduction system that generates for listeners an improved
stereophonic image within a large listening area.
A perennial problem in the design of loudspeaker systems for stereophonic
sound reproduction has been the general inability to provide coherent
stereo imaging within a large listening area. Numerous techniques have
been developed for enhancing the image, but the use of such techniques has
invariably resulted in a reduced listening area size. The trade-off has
been that the sharper stereo image gained by the use of these techniques
has been at the expense of having to settle for a narrower stereo
listening area. Such techniques are numerous and generally include the
need to make geometric assumptions which only hold true within a very
narrow listening area. For example, multiple driver arrays have been
configured so that the voice coils of each driver are vertically coplanar
on a plane perpendicular to the listener. This effectively reduces phase
shifting across the frequency spectrum since each voice coil of the array
is equidistant from the listener. Unfortunately, this enhanced phase
alignment is geometrically dependent upon the location of the listener,
and, in a two-speaker system, can occur ideally at only one point in
space.
Another technique by which stereo imaging has been enhanced has been the
cancellation of interaural crosstalk. Interaural crosstalk occurs when,
for example, left channel sound enters the listener's right ear and vice
versa. This results in false imaging and an unnatural sense to the
listener which would not be present at a live performance. Interaural
crosstalk has been cancelled by inverting and delaying each signal channel
and adding it to the other signal channel. The amount of delay is critical
and depends, among other things, on the location of the listener with
respect to the loudspeakers and the width of his head from ear to ear.
Again, critical geometrical relationships are necessary for the listener
to perceive the enhanced image. This results in a very small listening
area.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide a stereophonic
sound reproduction system that generally overcomes the deficiencies of the
prior art.
It is a more specific object of the present invention to provide a sound
reproduction system that provides an enhanced stereophonic image within a
large listening area.
The above and other objects are accomplished by a sound reproduction system
having both a left and a right transducer enclosure, each enclosure having
a main transducer array for receiving an audio channel signal and
providing direct reproduction thereof, the main transducer array being
directed into a listening area and having a dispersion profile which
substantially defines the listening area, a boundary transducer for
reproducing a frequency band-limited and 180 degree phase-shifted audio
channel signal, the boundary transducer being directed at an angle of
about 65 degrees with respect to the main transducer array, and an
expansion transducer for reproducing a frequency band-limited audio
channel signal, the expansion transducer being directed outwardly from the
listening area, with the enclosure being adapted to provide structural
support for the main transducer array, the boundary transducer and the
expansion transducer and to maintain a predetermined angular relationship
therebetween.
The main transducer array is made of a number of drivers and is capable of
reproducing the entire human-audible frequency band. The drivers of the
main array are further mounted on a panel which forms one side of a
multi-sided speaker enclosure. The main array panels of the left and right
speaker enclosures are canted toward each other and into the listening
area generally therebetween. The boundary transducer of each loudspeaker
receives and reproduces a frequency band-limited component of that
speaker's audio channel signal and is further connected 180 degrees out of
phase with respect to the main array. Finally, the expansion transducer of
each loudspeaker receives and reproduces a frequency band-limited
component of that speaker's audio channel signal, connected in phase with
respect to the main array.
In addition to the front loudspeakers, the system of the present invention
may be provided with either a front center transducer, a rear transducer
or transducers, or both. A center front transducer which would receive and
reproduce a frequency band-limited summation of the left and right audio
channel signals could be used if the left and right front loudspeakers are
positioned sufficiently far apart from each other. A center rear
transducer or left and right rear transducers, which would receive and
reproduce a frequency band-limited subtraction of the left audio channel
signal from the right, may further be used.
The appended claims set forth the features of the present invention with
particularity. The invention, together with its objects and advantages,
may be best understood from the following detailed description taken in
conjunction with the accompanying drawings of which:
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is perspective view of a front loudspeaker of the sound reproduction
system of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a plan view of the loudspeaker of FIG. 1;
FIG. 3 is a plan view of the system of the present invention configured
with left and right front loudspeakers;
FIG. 4 is a plan view similar to FIG. 3, but further showing a center front
transducer;
FIG. 5 is a plan view similar to FIG. 3, but further showing a center rear
transducer;
FIG. 6 is a plan view similar to FIG. 4, but further showing a center rear
transducer;
FIG. 7 is a plan view similar to FIG. 3, but further showing left and right
rear transducers; and
FIG. 8 is a plan view similar to FIG. 7, but further showing a center front
transducer.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
The present invention sets forth the architecture of an improved sound
reproduction system. A listener's experience of a stereophonic image is
expanded from a conventional flat frontal panorama to a three dimensional
sensation within a large listening area.
Turning now to the drawings, FIG. 1 illustrates a loudspeaker 10 of the
system of the present invention. Loudspeaker 10 has a main acoustic
transducer array, symbolically represented at 11 in FIG. 2, mounted on a
panel 12 comprising one side of a multi-sided enclosure 14 of loudspeaker
10. The main array is adapted to receive and reproduce the entire
human-audible frequency band of an audio channel signal and, preferably,
consists of three separate drivers, a low frequency driver 16, a middle
frequency driver 18 and a high frequency driver 20. The drivers 16, 18, 20
each receive and reproduce a different component of the frequency band of
an audio channel signal. The frequency band component received by each
driver is determined and provided for by a conventional crossover network.
Loudspeaker 10 further has a boundary transducer 22 mounted on a panel 24
of enclosure 14. As can be seen in FIG. 2, panel 24 is normally at an
angle of about 65 degrees with respect to panel 12. This angular
relationship, about 65 degrees in the preferred embodiment, is not
critical and need only be of a magnitude great enough such that the
dispersion profile of boundary transducer 22 does not directly intersect
that of the main array 11. Boundary transducer 22 receives and reproduces
the same audio channel signal as does the main array 11, but limited to
the frequency band of up to 4,000 Hertz, and in a manner that is 180
degrees out of phase with respect to main array 11. An expansion
transducer 26 is mounted on a panel 28 of enclosure 14. As can be seen in
FIG. 2, panel 28 is perpendicular to a back panel 30 of enclosure 14.
Expansion transducer 26 receives and reproduces the same audio channel
signal as does the main array 11, but limited to the frequency band of 400
to 20,000 Hertz.
Referring to FIG. 3, a pair of symmetrical loudspeakers 10 cooperate in the
sound reproduction system of the present invention. A large listening area
40 is provided, substantially defined by the dispersion profiles of the
main transducer arrays 11 of the loudspeakers 10. By virtue of the shape
of the loudspeakers 10, the main transducer arrays 11 are canted inward to
be directed into the listening area 40. Canting the main array 11 in this
manner improves phase alignment between the drivers 16, 18, 20 of the main
array 11, thereby reducing transient distortion and improving clarity of
sound. Loudspeakers 10 are preferably positioned adjacent to or mounted to
a wall such that the expansion transducer 26 of each loudspeaker 10 is
directed perpendicularly with respect to the wall.
It has been found that reflected tones and interaural crosstalk can
severely deteriorate the stereophonic image in the broad frequency band
from approximately 20 to 4,000 Hertz. Reflected tones are caused by
non-linear room boundaries, and interaural crosstalk arises when left
channel tones enter the listener's right ear and vice versa. Such
reflected tones and interaural crosstalk are cancelled by the boundary
transducer which is positioned at the outer perimeter of the listening
area 40 and is electrically connected 180 degrees out of phase with
respect to the main array 11. The 180 degree phase shift can be
accomplished by simply reversing the leads on the voice coil of boundary
transducer 22 with respect to the orientation of the leads on the voice
coil of the main array 11, or it can be accomplished by inverting the
signal with an active crossover network. Inasmuch as reflected tones and
interaural crosstalk negatively affect the stereophonic image most at
frequencies up to about 4,000 Hertz, the signal reproduced by the boundary
transducer 22 is frequency band-limited to substantially attenuate
components of the signal above 4,000 Hertz.
The boundary transducers 22 effectively cancel first arrival reflections
from room boundaries which would otherwise smear the sonic image, leaving
only crisp, vivid in-phase tones within the listening area 40. The
boundary transducers 22 also, however, effectively cancel the late arrival
reverberations which give the desirable perception of spaciousness to the
listener. To restore this perception of spaciousness, the expansion
transducer 26 is provided in each loudspeaker 10, directed outwardly from
the listening area 40 and frequency band-limited to receive and reproduce
those components of each audio channel signal between about 400 to 20,000
Hertz. Although frequency components above about 8,000 Hertz do affect the
listener's perception of spaciousness, because of the outward orientation
of expansion transducer 26, shorter wavelength tones corresponding to
frequencies above about 8000 Hertz do not interfere with the image
perceived by the listener created by the main array 11. This is so because
shorter wavelength tones from expansion transducer 26 are reflected before
entering the listening area 40 and are thus substantially attenuated and
greatly out of phase with respect to the sound from main array 11. As a
result of the configuration of the loudspeakers 10 as described above, a
listener within the listening area 40 experiences a mosaic of dominant
direct vivid in-phase tones with an overlay of diminished intensity phase
altered late arrival reverberant signals.
The sound reproduction system described above in conjunction with FIG. 3
provides an improved stereophonic image for a listener within a large
listening area. The size of the listening area 40 is variable by varying
the spacing of the loudspeakers 10 from each other. In general,
satisfactory imaging is possible with a spacing between loudspeakers 10 of
between about 6 and 48 feet. This will generate a listening area 40 having
a width dimension of about the same as the loudspeaker spacing and a depth
dimension of about half the width dimension, as can be seen in FIG. 3. It
should be noted that the maximum spacing between loudspeakers 10 while
maintaining satisfactory imaging may be less than 48 feet if the noise
level of the listening environment is high or if the listening area 40 is
within a room having unusual acoustic absorption characteristics.
With a loudspeaker spacing of more than about 48 feet, a noticeable sonic
void appears in the center of the listening area. To overcome this void, a
center transducer loudspeaker 42 is placed at front center, intermediate
the loudspeakers 10, in a second embodiment of the sound reproduction
system of the present invention as shown in FIG. 4. Center transducer 42
is disposed to reproduce a summation of the left and right audio channel
signals and, preferably, comprises a dual voice coil driver for carrying
out the summation. Inasmuch as a dual voice coil driver receiving both the
left and right audio channel signals would otherwise receive total audio
power equal to the summation of the audio power of the left and right
audio channel signals, an in-line power resistor (not shown) is provided
so that the audio power received by the center transducer 42 is
approximately equal to the left or right audio channel signal. Thus, what
the listener experiences from the center transducer 42 is a monophonic
signal which equals the left plus the right audio channel signals. The
frequency response of the center transducer 42 is band-limited so that
frequency components of the summation signal above about 1,200 Hertz are
substantially attenuated. This frequency contouring is necessary so that
the frequency components of the sound reproduced by the center transducer
42 are below the human pinar localizing frequency. The pinar localizing
frequency is the frequency above which human listeners can discriminate
and localize a sonic source. It is important that the center transducer 42
not reproduce sounds above the pinar localizing frequency, since such
sounds could destabilize the stereo image created by the left and right
front loudspeakers 10. Placing the center transducer 42 centrally between
the left and right front loudspeakers 10 and sharply rolling off the
frequency response above about 1,200 Hertz fills the sonic void in the
center of the listening area 40 without altering the image produced
therein or the listener's ability to localize the source of sound.
The sound reproduction system of the present invention is dependent upon
tones reflected from behind the listening area 40 to complete the stereo
imaging. If the shape of the room is too deep or too wide, or the level of
the background noise is too high, or the sound absorption of the back
walls or ceiling is too great, the enhanced imaging can be adversely
affected. To compensate for these problems, a rear transducer that
projects into the listening area 40 from behind is provided in yet another
embodiment of the present invention. Such a rear transducer is shown at 44
in FIG. 6 and is disposed to reproduce a signal representing the
subtraction of the left audio channel signal from the right audio channel
signal. Preferably, the subtraction is carried out by a dual voice coil
driver in a manner similar to the manner in which the summation of the
left and right audio channels is carried out in the front center
transducer 42.
A signal representing the difference between the right and left audio
channel signals is reproduced by the rear transducer 44 so that the
acoustic output of the rear transducer 44 is large when there is a great
difference between the left and right audio signals and is zero when the
left and right signals are the same. This is done primarily to preserve
imaging when a vocal soloist is present in the sound to be reproduced.
Vocal soloists are recorded virtually monophonically, and that signal is
split equally between the left and right stereo audio channel signals.
With the rear transducer 44 of the present invention, reproducing only a
difference signal, a vocal soloist's signal will be completely absent from
the rear, as it should be to create a listener's perception that a
vocalist is located centrally in front of the listening area. Although the
difference signal of the rear transducer 44 preserves a frontal
orientation sensation of a vocal soloist, a difference between left and
right which would arise from the recording of an orchestra or a chorus is
still available to simulate reflected tones from the rear, enhancing the
image produced by the present sound reproduction system. Again, to ensure
stereo imaging within the listening area 40, the rear transducer 44 is
frequency band-limited to substantially attenuate components of the
subtraction signal above the pinar localizing frequency of about 1,200
Hertz. Sharp roll-off above 1,200 Hertz avoids splitting the stereo image
which takes place in the front. It should be understood that the rear
transducer 44 may be used either with a front center transducer 42, as
shown in FIG. 6, or without a front center transducer 42, as shown in FIG.
5, depending upon the needs of any particular application.
In place of the single rear transducer 44, a further embodiment of the
present invention is described with reference to FIG. 7, having a left
rear transducer 46 and a right rear transducer 48. Both the left rear
transducer 46 and the right rear transducer 48 are, like the single rear
transducer 44, frequency band-limited to substantially attenuate
components of their respective signals above about 1,200 Hertz. The left
rear transducer 46 and the right rear transducer 48 both reproduce a
signal representing the subtraction of the left audio channel signal from
the right, similar to the center rear transducer 44 described above. Prior
to the subtraction, the left audio channel signal component of the left
rear transducer's subtraction signal is attenuated, and the right audio
channel signal component of the right rear transducer's subtraction signal
is similarly attenuated. The magnitude of these attenuations is preferably
about 8 decibels in order to avoid transients which would become additive
between the left front and left rear transducers, or right front and right
rear transducers, causing multiple acoustic centers. In addition, this
would allow for a maximum variation in intensity between left and right
signals of 16 decibels. Such a 16 decibel variation is the maximum
variation which would not cause a shift in image. Furthermore, attenuating
the signal components of each rear transducer as described above causes a
crossfiring of the rear transducers which further centralizes the stereo
image. As with the single rear transducer 44, dual rear transducers can be
used either with a front center transducer 42, as shown in FIG. 8, or
without, as shown in FIG. 7.
It will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that modifications to
the foregoing preferred embodiment may be made in various aspects. The
present invention is set forth with particularity in the appended claims.
It is deemed that the spirit and scope of that invention encompasses such
modifications and alterations to the preferred embodiment as would be
apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art and familiar with the
teachings of the present application.
* * * * *
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Description  |
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