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  2. Edgar Villchur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgar_Villchur

    The first acoustic-suspension loudspeaker, the AR-1, was introduced at the New York Audio Show in 1954, and was an instant success. Villchur continued to improve loudspeakers, coming out with new models roughly every two years. The AR-2, produced in 1956, was a no-frills version of the speaker at a lower price.

  3. Acoustic suspension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_suspension

    The two most common types of speaker enclosure are acoustic suspension (sometimes called pneumatic suspension) and bass reflex.In both cases, the tuning affects the lower end of the driver's response, but above a certain frequency, the driver itself becomes the dominant factor and the size of the enclosure and ports (if any) become irrelevant.

  4. Loudspeaker acoustics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loudspeaker_acoustics

    Loudspeaker acoustics is a subfield of acoustical engineering concerned with the design of loudspeakers. [1] It focuses on the reproduction of sound and the parameters involved in doing so in actual equipment.

  5. Acoustic Research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acoustic_Research

    Acoustic Research was a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based company that manufactured high-end audio equipment. The brand is now owned by VOXX.Acoustic Research was known for the AR-3 series of speaker systems, which used the 12 in (300 mm) acoustic suspension woofer of the AR-1 with newly designed dome mid-range speaker and high-frequency drivers.

  6. KEF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KEF

    Acoustic Compliance Enhancement (ACE) (Muon, 2005), a technology delivering the bass performance of a conventional speaker of twice the size Single Apparent Source Technology (Blade, 2011), a technique of configuring speakers to cover the entire bandwidth of the loudspeaker, which enables all frequencies to appear to radiate from one single point

  7. Transmission line loudspeaker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transmission_line_loudspeaker

    The concept was innovated within acoustic enclosure design, and originally termed an "acoustical labyrinth", by acoustic engineer and later Director of Research, Benjamin Olney, who developed the concept at the Stromberg-Carlson Telephone Co. in the early 1930s while studying the effect of enclosure shape and size on speaker output, including ...