Building Your Own Drivers?
students asks: "I want to cheaply demonstrate how speaker 'drivers' (the part that makes the noise, not software...also known as a cone) work, not to produce ideal sound. Some quick research has made it clear that it's easy to find directions on how to build a fancy speaker box, but not much on how to make a driver. Unfortunately, I can't use Sake. I also can't get the thin wood. Does anyone know how to build a driver out of home materials?"
A driver is just a solonoid connected to a paper cone. Look up how solonoids are constructed and you should get a pretty good idea of how to procede.
-73, de n1ywb
www.n1ywb.com
Here are the instructions you need to make a speaker.
Hmmm, there really isn't much to a driver. It's basically just a coil of wire attached to a suspended structure (the cone) that sits inside a permanent magnet. The energy is fed to the coil which makes it move inside the magnet which in turn moves the cone structure to create air pressure waves (sound).
Simple science-type experiments are super easy to do. No more complex than an electric motor experiment.
Although I haven't read it, this probably has everything you need.
The ratio of people to cake is too big
You will have to create your own motor (magnet + former), your own cone and your own suspension (spider and suround)
get a few donut shaped magnets amd glue them together, a paper tube wrap some thin magnet wire around it secure it with epoxy. get a hunk of round steel and a thin plate. attach the steel to the center of the plate, put the magenets around the pole peice and attach to the plate. add another steel plate to the top with a hole big enough that the former fits in.
thats your motor
make a spider from something. get a paper cone and attach it to the spider to the former to the surround to the frame. and your done !
Or, you can get a cheap $10 speaker from partsexpress.com and use that as an example with good drawings
I follow the SDK and GDN principles.. Spelling Dont Kount, Grammer Dont Neither
http://users.ev1.net/~arfonrg/SimpleSpeaker.jpg
Your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
Here is a science lesson (meant for high school students) on how to make a speaker. You can download the doc here or use Google's cache here.
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