Hi everyone.
I hope I'm posting this in the right spot.
It is my understanding that a speaker with multiple drivers each doing their own thing (tweet, mid, woof, etc.) can be phased so that the the drivers all produce sound at the same time.
Quick question: This is only possible at either a low volume or at a volume where all the drivers are phased to work in unison, right? Once a speaker hits higher volumes, the drivers would no longer be working in unison, therefore causing the drivers to cancel or reinforce each other. The Frequency response of the speaker would always be changing, right?
Is it possible to create an active filter that adjusts itself so that the drivers are always in phase, regardless of volume?
Maybe if someone were to use drivers, all electromagnetically driven, hook them up to an active filter that adjusts power output to the electromagnets depending on volume (or something else), maybe the phasing could be consistent.
Also, when a speaker diaphragm moves forward, it compresses a certain volume of air in front of it, creating the sound wave. If one were to try to imagine what the sound wave looked like, what would it look like? How deep would the wave be (from front to back), and does that matter? Is it the front of a sound wave that is produced that matters in phasing or is it somewhere else? Does this make Any SENSE???
Thanks.