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How did this come about and is it like your other wave guides?
The S-1 simply sounds live like no other desktop speakers I've owned...
With all due respect, Bob, Earl Geddes claims to have applied the term wave guide to loudspeaker applications in the early '90s. Prior to that it was a term used in microwave transmission and reception.
Yeah, I designed the passive part (the speaker proper) part of the S-1. NuForce designed the active Waveguide Compensation filter into the Icon though. It made more sense to put the filtering there than build a passive filter into every enclosure.
directed at WmR:I was not, in my post, referring to Genelec as the outfit that first used the term, but that actually had speakers in production with what they called a waveguide - and this was 1985, not 1993.Remaining slightly OT for a moment, the "waveguide" employed by SP Tech is far from shallow and raises the question of the definition of waveguide, vs. what is commonly called a horn. I'm not aware of a definitive distinction between the two.It seems recently to have been well established that a horn does not intrinsically have an unpleasant sound characteristic, so for all I know this could be a great sounding horn.For the record, a BBC recording engineer I met - who would have been old enough to associate with engineers who worked with Alan Blumlein - called him "Blum' lin" with a short "u" and "i".
The term "waveguide" goes back to the late 30's and early 40's with radar.