A Foil Tweeter, Sound From Kitchen Consumables

The world of audio has produced a variety of different loudspeaker designs over the last century, though itā€™s fair to say that the trusty moving coil reigns supreme. That hasnā€™t stopped plenty of engineers from trying new ways to make sound though, and [R.U.H] is here with a home-made version of one of them. Itā€™s a foil tweeter, a design in which a corrugated strip of foil is held in a magnetic field, and vibrates when an audio frequency current is passed through it.

He shows a couple of takes on the design, both with neodymium magnets but with different foils and 3D printed or wooden surrounds. They both make a noise when plugged into an amplifier, and unsurprisingly the thicker foil has less of the high notes.

We can see that in there is the possibility for a high quality tweeter, but we canā€™t help having one concern. This device has an extremely low impedance compared to the amplifier, and thus would probably be drawing far too much current. Weā€™d expect it to be driven through a transformer instead, if he had any care for not killing the amplifier.

Happily there are other uses for a ribbon, they are far better known as microphones.



from Blog ā€“ Hackaday https://ift.tt/6HP4TdG

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