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In article ,
Logan Shaw wrote: Jay Kadis wrote: In article , Logan Shaw wrote: Physics seems to tell me that pressure will be proportional to force, and force is what accelerates the diaphgram. Therefore, shouldn't the pressure and the diaphgram's instantaneous acceleration be proportional? If so, then the diaphragm's velocity is the integral of the pressure over time. You seem to be ignoring the restoring force, since the diaphragm is restrained and not free to move in response to the pressure exerted. Hmm, I am starting to learn that all this stuff is way more complicated than I thought it was. Thought I understood it, but apparently only in a very shallow sense. How big is the restoring force compared to the force due to pressure? I'm assuming significantly smaller, so that ignoring it can still give you a workable first-order approximation. Or is that not true? - Logan It is the sum of all forces resisting the movement of the diaphragm: it would depend on the tension applied to the diaphragm in the case of a condensor element and the stiffness of the suspension for a dynamic element. In the case of the condensor element, displacement is very small whereas with a dynamic element, there is more significant movement. This would imply that the restoring force is large for a condensor element and smaller for a dynamic transducer. -Jay -- x------- Jay Kadis ------- x---- Jay's Attic Studio ------x x Lecturer, Audio Engineer x Dexter Records x x CCRMA, Stanford University x http://www.offbeats.com/ x x-------- http://ccrma-www.stanford.edu/~jay/ ----------x |
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