ملف:Edward Kellogg & Chester Rice with cone speaker 1925.jpg
الملف الأصلي (935 × 603 بكسل حجم الملف: 360 كيلوبايت، نوع MIME: image/jpeg)
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⧼wm-license-information-description⧽ |
English: The first electrodynamic cone loudspeaker invented in 1925 at General Electric laboratories in Schenectady, New York, with inventors Edward W. Kellogg and Chester W. Rice. Modern loudspeakers are based on this design, which combined the moving coil driver mechanism with a paper cone diaphragm. They are holding the driver unit; the completed speaker with its 6 inch cone, is partially visible behind them.
Kellogg and Rice invented the concept in 1921, but it took until 1925 to improve the acoustics enough to compete with existing horn loudspeakers. They filed for patents and announced the device in 1925. The speaker's advantage was that it had flatter frequency response than horn speakers, and could reproduce adequate bass without the enormous length of sound path required in horns. The first commercial model, the RCA Radiola Loudspeaker #104, went on sale in 1926 for $250, about $2000 in today's dollars. Information from History and types of loudspeakers, Edison Tech Center |
⧼wm-license-information-date⧽ | 1925 |
⧼wm-license-information-source⧽ | Retrieved September 24, 2014 from W. T. Meenam, "A new type of hornless loudspeaker" in Popular Radio magazine, published by Popular Radio, Inc., New York, Vol. 8, No. 2, August 1925, p. 128 on American Radio History website |
⧼wm-license-information-author⧽ | W. T. Meenam |
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زمن/تاريخ | صورة مصغرة | الأبعاد | مستخدم | تعليق | |
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حالي | ★ مراجعة معتمدة 13:03، 22 أكتوبر 2023 | 935 × 603 (360 كيلوبايت) | Pastakhov (نقاش | مساهمات) | Upload https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e3/Edward_Kellogg_%26_Chester_Rice_with_cone_speaker_1925.jpg |
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وصلات
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- 1921 inventions
- 1925 inventions
- 1926 introductions
- Chester W. Rice
- Dynamic loudspeakers with excitation coils
- Edward W. Kellogg
- Electrodynamic cone loudspeakers
- General Electric Research Laboratory
- Historical loudspeakers
- History of audio engineering
- History of radio
- People with loudspeakers
- RCA Radiola Loudspeakers