The Official Website of D.B. Keele, Jr. | Loudspeaker Engineering & CBT Arrays Inventor | Audio Magazine Reviewer

39. An Important Aspect of Underhung Voice-Coils: A Technical Tribute to Ray Newman

AES Convention: 121 Paper Number:6911
Publication Date: 2006-10-06

In the 1970s, Ray Newman while at Electro-Voice, single handedly and very successfully promoted the use of the then new concept of the Thiele/Small parameters and related design techniques for categorizing loudspeakers and systems to the loudspeaker industry. This paper posthumously recounts the contents of three significant Electro-Voice memos written in 1992 by Ray Newman concerning a comparison of overhung versus underhung loudspeaker motor assemblies. The information in the memos is still very relevant today. He proposed a comparison between the two assembly types assuming motors that had the: 1. same Xmax, 2. same efficiency, 3. similar thermal behavior, and 4. same voice coil. He calculated the required magnetic gap energy and discovered to his surprise that the magnet requirements actually went down dramatically when switching from an overhung to an underhung structure and depended only on the ratio between Xmax and the voice-coil length. This is in contrast with “common sense” that dictates that longer gaps mean larger magnets. He showed that for high-excursion motors, a switch could be made from a ferrite overhung structure to an equivalent high-energy neodymium underhung structure with little cost penalty. This paper recounts this early work and then presents motor predictions using present-day magnetic FEM simulators illustrating his concepts. Ray’s original memos and notes will also be included as an appendix to the paper.

Click to Browse
Carlson, David; Frye, Kent; Keele, Jr., Don. B. (Don); Long, Jim; Newman, Raymond J.; Ruhlen, Matt; 2006; An Important Aspect of Underhung Voice-Coils: A Technical Tribute to Ray Newman [PDF]; Electro-Voice Div. Telex Communications; Electro-Voice Inc.; Gentex Corporation; Harman International Industries; Harman/Becker Automotive Systems; Paper 6911; Available from: https://aes2.org/publications/elibrary-page/?id=13745

Don’t worry about people stealing your ideas. If your ideas are any good, you’ll have to ram them down people’s throats.

Howard Aiken, IBM engineer
NOTICE!
Please note that these materials are presented to ensure timely dissemination of scholarly and technical work. Copyright and all rights therein are retained by authors or by other copyright holders. All persons copying this information are expected to adhere to the terms and constraints invoked by each author’s copyright. These works may not be reposted without the explicit permission of the copyright holder
Note that one has to respect the copyright and to ask permission to the copyright owner if one wants to print or use a paper.