See-Through, Paper-Thin Speakers 112
Cormac writes "Here's an interesting article about scienists in the Korean Institute of Science and Technology (KIST) who are developing see-through flat speakers which (they claim) could be rolled/folded up and put in your pocket or even be pinned to a wall." I wonder about the fidelity, but there could be some excellent potential here: it irritates me that my center channel is on my TV. Without getting a projector and putting the speaker behind a screen, something like this could just be built onto your TV. But can it sound good?
Super-Hi-Fi tech! (Score:1)
Plasma tweeters
Electrostatics for the midrange
Sub-Woofer for low range & subsonics
Add a nice tube amp or at least a harmon/kardon or my poor departed Pioneer Spec-2, a decent pre-am (I miss my Pioneer Spec-1 as well), a Nak cassette deck, revox linear track turntable (with good quality cartrige&needle), Ampex DVD with the "right" roms (maybe not that Hi-Fi, but worth it anyways to play out of zone DVDs), and a decent laptop to run MP3s...but when you have a system in this range...most MP3s really sound like shit. Now a DBX encoded vinyl LP of pipe organ music....that will show you what the difference is between a good analog system and the best digital.
Years from now they will bemoan the fact that so much music of the 20th and 21st centuries is almost unlistenable because it was released with only 16 bit at 44.1 KHertz!
ttyl
Farrell
Re:Does Martin Logan already have something simila (Score:2)
Re:Traditional speaker technology is doomed (Score:2)
I don't know what you'd have to do to get a huge plasma speaker that could carry bass, but I don't want to be around while you try it :)
"Doppler shift" (Score:2)
In order to do composite drivers, you have to go with simpler crossovers, not more complex- phase relationships have to be dead simple, the normal rules for multi-element speakers are entirely reversed.
Electrostatics and planars do what they do not just by having the speaker handle all frequencies with one element, but by having the element behave more controllably than cone drivers. Use of very light elements can mean little or no overshoot or ringing at bass frequencies. That ringing is what would really create 'doppler' effects on the sound- having the speaker follow the path of the waveform as one unit does not cause any sort of distortion in itself.
The roll-up piezo speakers are likely to be fairly crappy sound, but this is mostly because they're lacking in any sort of solid stand or base to push against, and the piezo operates by flexing and going convex or concave. Clamp the edges and you'll get more bass and general fidelity.
Re:Like electrostats... (Score:3)
I've experimented with these fairly extensively, and still am from time to time. DIYing center-driven stretched-mylar speakers is fun, but tricky to make useful. Here's what I learned:
DIY is fun
Re:Plastic? I wanna make music with FIRE! (Score:1)
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I noticed
Air Pressure (Score:3)
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All the time. (Score:1)
Think about it. You want your laptop to be as thin and light as possible. You bet they would put one of these in them if they could. Look at how thing the screens and keyboards are getting.
Speakers (Score:2)
On the other end I've got two 10cm x 5cm cheapie speakers I bought at discount (old iMac color) that sound ok but tinny. For 5 bucks I can't complain, they're smaller then anything else & don't mess with any magnetic media near them.
As to on a laptop screen - this as been talked about for years but every time a problem appears. Most of the times the speakers just weren't very robust physically, certianly not up to the life of a laptop. Or they've required too much power or degraded quickly. Then there's the whole "transparency" thing - unless they're really really clear folks aren't going want to put a smoky layer of whatever over their screens, audio or no. From the article pics of this latest incarnation it looks pretty murky...
Taco is my Audio God (Score:2)
... if he can spatially distinguish between a speaker on top of his TV and behind the TV.
How close are you sitting and how big is your TV? Unless you're talking a 36" TV and < 3' distance, I don't see how you can tell.
"Beware by whom you are called sane."
Umm... no... (Score:1)
Hardly. There are two I can think of that outclass EVERYTHING in the US. B&W's [bwspeakers.com] line, specifically the Nautilus, are some of the most trick speakers on Earth... the 601 coming it at $400 to the 801 used at Abbey Road studio to the $30,000.00 Nautilus - all made in the UK. From Holland we have BD Design's [bd-design.nl] Oris. There are many more. Focal from France, Morel from Israel, Peerless from Germany, Solen from Canada... the list goes on. I really cannot name a US company that can compete with the exception of Magnepan [magnepan.com] (which comes to mind when you mention these thin speakers). If you are thinking of Bose as a world leader, they make crap... but my point is the US retaining leadership is a stretch of the imagination. The US has market share, but I current audio reviews claim that B&W is the hallmark of design. Many agree.
Re:I know when I hear Korean stereo equipment (Score:1)
tonal quality... (Score:1)
matguy
Re:On the Monitor? (Score:1)
That sounds awful 2d to me...
It does. It probably doesn't occur to non-techies that normal stereo sound is just 1D and dolby surrond is 2D. Yes, that means mono sound is 0D.
However, clever phase-shifting could make the appearance of 2D using just two (eg. stereo) speakers.
Re:great. (Score:2)
Or someone else's sweater perhaps? (evil grin) Gives this sluggy comic [sluggy.com] a new shot at reality. :)
Re:Roll car planned next? (Score:1)
You try it.
AIEEEE!!!
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Re:great. (Score:1)
on second thought, that might be a bad thing.
Re:Like electrostats... (Score:2)
Why not try to use resonance?? Products like the Bose wave use long resanator tubes to get decent bass out of two 1" speakers. What would happen if you used a resonator with the mylar stretched across it?? (An old drum body, etc...)
I realize that this will not correct the already low bass response, as there apparently are no surfaces capable of producing the long low waves, but should add depth and take away from the tinniness of the speakers. With contact on a wood resonator, percussion and bass should at least produce a pleasant woody thump.
Just a thought...
~Hammy
Re:Here's your problem... (Score:1)
Koh says his lab has turned the project over to sound engineers to work on the low-frequency sound issue.
Re:I know when I hear Korean stereo equipment (Score:1)
I just purchased a Rotel RCD-971, and I'm now on the mad lookout for HDCD recordings. I thought I had the audio fever bad before...
Re:First, Paper Phones... (Score:2)
See-Through, Paper-Thin Speakers (Score:2)
Mount one to your monitor and connect it with a full duplex mic line to your computer. Use NetMeeting and you can get the ultimate video phone.
Now Microsoft (or the government, whichever lasts)can add some inconspicuous code and listen and watch everything you do.
Oh, no wait, that's 1984 isn't it?
Re:the problem with bass reproduction... (Score:3)
While this is essentialy true, it isn't the most significant problem with large panel speakers. These are large enough that the surface won't have to move much. (of cource if you make them small you're screwed).
Panel speakers traditionally got two problems:
They tend to be dipoles which means the got to be huge or have no bass. Once the path from the rear of the driver to the front becomes small compared to the acoustic wavelenght it exhibits an acoustic short which works to cancel and phaseshift LF sounds.
Also any driver which active surface is larger than the wavelenght of the sounds it reproduce will exhibit beaming and comb filtering since for a given point in space the path to two different points on the driver will be different. For large drivers the difference can become significant compared to wavelenghts and interference ensues.
Some panel speaker technologies also suffer from beeing very hard on the amps (el-stat).
In short it's hard to justify making a panel speaker.
Remember that it is a panel doesen't make it thin unto itself. If you don't want a dipole you still need the box, and if it is a dipole the problems above occurs and it will still have to stand out from the wall to avoid interference from back wall reflections.
Roll car planned next? (Score:2)
Shawn Pack
More Useful for Surround (Score:1)
-_Quinn
Re:Here's your problem... (Score:2)
Not enough magnetism to warrant shielding (Score:1)
Cheers
This technology is already for sale (Score:2)
I'm not sure whether Monsoon has this stuff patented or whether there just aren't many companies implementing it yet...
Re:Sound Quality? (Score:2)
may electrostats come with subwoofers for this reason.
I don't think these are for Audiophiles... (Score:3)
Same thing here with paper speakers. This isn't designed for watching The Matrix or Gladiator in all its glory. These speakers are better suited for cheap things when you just want any sound production whatsoever... Like talking advertisements in magazines...
On second thought maybe this isn't a good idea.
-Ted
First, Paper Phones... (Score:2)
Plus, there's not mention of frequency response, wattage, impedience, nuthin'.
I doubt it's real (or if it is, it's real stupid, or real bad).
Re:First, Paper Phones... (Score:1)
As for impedance: being a piezo device, they probably like lots of voltage and little current, ergo they are high impedance devices.
The problem with bass response is easy to see: imaging stretching a sheet of plastic wrap across your window frame. Turn your stereo on inside, and go outside to listen. Now, the sound will be about as good as your stereo, because the plastic wrap will be moving a fair amount back and forth, moving a lot of air.
For these speakers to do the same thing, they are going to have to be able to flex quite a bit to move enough air to make good bass. The problem is finding a piezoelectric substance that will flex that much without cracking. However, if they are using a polymer instead of a crystalline material, they may have a chance.
Usefulness to Its Own Degree (Score:2)
These speakers, if they come about well enough, will be used in places where they're needed, and not in places where competing technology kicks more ass. It's pretty much that way anywhere with any product. I see the following good uses for these:
Flat speakers today (Score:2)
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Re:Replace your tweeters (Score:2)
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Wearable Boombox (Score:1)
Cards (Score:1)
What about business cards that played your radio commercial on command?
Greeting cards, of course. This has already been done, but I'm sure it'll be done again.
And finally, in my case, a credit card that screams in pain and curses me violently every time I use it.
Re:Roll car planned next? (Score:1)
Mike Roberto
- GAIM: MicroBerto
Nothing New - But cool to play with (Score:1)
Re:the problem with bass reproduction... (Score:1)
My very educated mother just served us nine pizza-pies.
See-Trough, Paper-Thin Speakers? (Score:1)
Where did I leave those new speakers?
RASG!!!
Damn...
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this is great (Score:2)
the problem with bass reproduction... (Score:2)
For most hifi systems this solved by having separate cones for the high end, midrange, and low end (tweeters, subwoofers, etc.).
My guess is that these simply won't be suitable for audiophile-level quality sound reproduction. Their best use would be for portable systems where sound quality isn't as big an issue, or computer speakers since we're all used to crappy sound anyway.
Replace your tweeters (Score:2)
The only "intuitive" interface is the nipple. After that, it's all learned.
You fail to see what the marketroids will do.... (Score:2)
Reach for a kleenex and hear ads for the latest cold medicine as you blow your nose!
And of course, new at Spencer Gifts:
Talking toilet paper! With hilarious phrases like 'Man it's dark in here' and 'you thought YOU had a shit job'!
Chesty-wet-babe posters will now spout 900-ads at regular intervals.
Re:What If.... (Score:1)
Re:I don't think these are for Audiophiles... (Score:1)
Like electrostats... (Score:1)
This sounds a little like electrostatic speakers, but cheaper. There are a lot of high-end electrostats out there now (martin-logan, magnapan, quad, etc.), which have use a vibrating mylar film or ribbon suspended between metal grills or plates, or something along those lines. I've heard examples that sound phenomenal, aside from the lack of bass, but require serious amplification.
These sound like they'll require a lot less power, but will have even more trouble moving the amount of air necessary to make real bass or to actually get loud. I mean, how much air can something like this actually move? I'd have to guess not much.
Re:Like electrostats... (Score:1)
Funny that you mention the position-sensitivity of the magnapans -- a friend in college had a pair, and spent hours trying to position them to get the ideal sound. When he finally got it right, they sounded phenomenal. I think he finally got rid of them after frying the tweeter ribbons a few times and then moving to a tiny apartment in Manhattan.
Re:See-through? (Score:1)
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Re:Historicaly.... (Score:1)
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paper :: flat :: speakers :: two words (Score:1)
two more words
sub woofer
last two words
need above
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Re:Impressive Possibilities (Score:2)
I work to oppose software patents -- look at the little write up I did a month back on the M$ web poll patent. Know what facetious humor is?
CHoad.
Vergil Bushnell
Re:Impressive Possibilities (Score:2)
What articulate, yet visceral rhetoric!
What deft use of sandbox-cliches!
Vergil Bushnell
Re:Impressive Possibilities (Score:2)
Your post didn't irritate me at all - it was the anonymous troll after you.
Sincerely,
vergil
Vergil Bushnell
Impressive Possibilities (Score:3)
- Ever been to a large protest or demonstration? Groups with axes to grind are typically under-funded, and habitually rely on tinny Radio Shack megaphones to "get the word out" - a marginal improvement over shouting, given ambient street noise. With these speakers, a dissident group could easily seed a crowd with plastic amplifiers taped to their ubiquitous posterboard placards.
- Pack a stack of these piezo-electronic sheets in your backpack, find an abandoned warehouse and a tube of super-glue and voila! Instant rave!
- Promotional companies that currently wheat-paste metropolitan walls with repetitous movie/concert fliers might find a way to paint their advertisements on sheets of the aforementioned plastic film with a flat EEPROM backing, thereby augementing their garish displays with short bursts of sound. Wait, I should patent that idea.
Sincerly,
Vergil
Cluebot [cluebot.com].
Vergil Bushnell
Here's your problem... (Score:3)
"Even with quite large ones, which I've got a pair of them in my living room, they need a bass reinforcement," says David Pearce, a research fellow in functional materials at the University of Birmingham in England who specializes in piezoelectric ceramics. "Hearing these sort of panel speakers individually, they always sound kind of tinny. But then you put them together with bass support and you say, 'That sounds pretty good, actually.'"
Well, it was nice until that part... No volume and no loud bass, I'll stick with what I have, thanks.
Shielding? (Score:2)
hmm.. I wonder... (Score:2)
instead of scratching a record/cd you could do tons of dopplar effects by f'in with a thin flexible speaker...
Let's see DJ scribbles (or whatever) get down with that!
instead of "scratching" it will be called "tearing" or "folding" a phat beat=P
sounds silly but plausible to move a speaker around for effect (See leslie speakers, or their "virtual/electric" bretheren of phase shifting audio devices phasers, flangers, and chorus')
*Shrug* YMMV
E.
Re:Like electrostats... (Score:2)
They do need about 30% more power to drive them tough.
Another important thing is that they cannot be placed against the wall because that kills the sound. So altough they are thin ( about 1'' ), they need a foot of clearence behind them. I wonder if the object of the article does better in this respect.
Re:fyi (Score:1)
If you'd taken the time to read the article, you'd konw for a fact that pizeo-electric metals (specifically platinum electrodes) are being used.
Big Bad Bass (Score:1)
They say this like the new speakers will solve the problem, but then don't explain anything more about it.
And if you think about it, it makes sense that flat speakers would lack in the bass department. How could they not? If you've ever wathcerd a big subwoofer at work, you'll see they move quite alot. A good centimenter worth of motion, at least. Now, if you pin a flat speaker to a wall, how do you expect to achieve that sort of range of motion? Sure, it'll be able to vibrate very quickly against the wall, but it has no room for the deep slow bass virations.
Perhaps they'll eventually work out a system in which the speaker sits in a deep picture frame, but until then, seems like flat tweeters and conventional woofers is the way to go.
Re:On the Monitor? (Score:1)
That sounds awful 2d to me...
Re:First, Paper Phones... (Score:1)
Flat speakers have been aroud a while. What makes you doubt these? *cough*troll*cough*
Re:On the Monitor? (Score:1)
Seems like this should be fairly obvious. But you're right, a lot of people think of stereo as "all around you" when it's really just occuring on a line between the speakers.
On the other hand (and getting off topic) it seems like you should be able to simulates everything human's can hear just with two speakers, one for each ear. After all, sound comes in two sources, seems like it should only need to be generated from two sources. Of course, clever phase shifting (like you mentioned earlier) would need to be used, I would think.
On the Monitor? (Score:1)
Cool. Maybe some real 3d sound is coming up. Characters talk on the screen, and the sound comes from that point on the screen.
___
Re:On the Monitor? (Score:1)
Of course, those have huge speakers actually hanging behind the screen.
___
Re:Like electrostats... (Score:1)
I have heard full range electrostatics that can satisfy all but the most bass loving rocker. The Accoustat model 6, while not as good as the newer Quads or older KLH 9 in the traditional electrostat areas (midrange, transparenecy), had very good bass.
Re:I know when I hear Korean stereo equipment (Score:1)
Sound Quality? (Score:1)
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Go steff it in my ear... (Score:1)
What If.... (Score:1)
What if I lose it. What if I place it in a white room, with white walls, white carpet and bright florescent lights.
HOW AM I GONNA FIND IT!
on a side note, if they can make subwoofers out of this I might just buy a Volkswagaon.
Re:Impressive Possibilities (Score:1)
Re:Impressive Possibilities (Score:1)
(This may be the only forum in the world in which someone might say, "Now that I've finished testing it on orphans and puppies, I've just patented my airborne plague capable of killing all animal and plant life on land and sea", and get the response, "You fiend! You should open source that plague!")
However, I suppose I should have put in a smiley or something. I didn't really think you were terribly serious, and I wasn't really serious in my response, either.
Please feel free to burn in hell or not, as you see fit. :)
Re:Impressive Possibilities (Score:1)
Well, I suppose we're OK then. See you in the funny papers!
Re:Flat speakers today (Score:1)
phil
Imagine... (Score:1)
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Traditional speaker technology is doomed (Score:1)
What's wrong with that you say? Well first of all, as some people have already pointed out, the smaller they get the worse the sound is. Small speakers just can't produce the same bass that our ears can hear. And no matter what you make them out of it will always be that way if you use the standard old vibrating film design. Period.
What we need is a REAL revolutionary design change in the loudspeaker. A speaker with no moving parts. A speaker that simply vibrates the air without having to vibrate some part of it's anatomy at the same time.
I'm no engineer, but a mass of ionized air could easily be vibrated by use of electro-magnets without any direct physical contact. Since there is no direct physical manipulation of the air with a solid object, all the limitations of size and sound can be eliminated. Also, why do cheap speakers sound bad? It's bacause of the cheap materials used to vibrate the air. With no materials used to vibrate the air (only electricity) sound quality can be greatly improved as well.
Any electrical/sound engineers care to comment? I give you my invitation to steal my IP as long as I get the first samples!
Is that a......... (Score:2)
Seriously though, I can see a bigger market in the home theatre market rather than in the laptop computer market. Really, when is the last time a laptop user has complained about the huge speakers on his/her laptop that are taking up valuable space and weigh a ton?
Re:All the time. (Score:2)
Vaporware. (Score:1)
Note the word "think". Translation: vaporware. I'll believe it when I'm pinning one to the wall.
"// this is the most hacked, evil, bastardized thing I've ever seen. kjb"
Microstructured Elastomeric Electromagnetic Film (Score:1)
They too originally thought it would work for speakers, but found the sound sucked.
It seems that technology maybe in a loop.
Turn it on its end (Score:2)
Careful what you say....
Paper-thin rollup display with sound (Score:1)
Discuss.
Sometimes I worry that I'll develop Alzheimer's disease, but no one will notice.
Re:Sound Quality? (Score:1)
Plastic? I wanna make music with FIRE! (Score:3)
For something really cool, sometimes you have to look at older technology, like the plasma speakers [aol.com] described here.
The idea is that the shape/size of a flame can be influenced by a high voltage signal, and the resulting changes in the flame are broadcast as a high fidelity sound. Here's a quote from the above site
There's not much bass to these, but boy are they cool looking!And, as an added bonus, you get to play with nifty Tesla coil technology.
These are true Geek Speakers.
Not really all that new (Score:1)
Martin Logan [martinlogan.com] has been producing electrostatic speakers that are made with a transparent mylar film for decades. A thin layer of conductive material is deposited on the film. The film is attached to a frame and wires run along the side of the film to carry the signal. A high frequency static field is generated on either side of the panel, which, obviously, creates vibration when voltage is applied.
Also, Quad produced an electrostatic loudspeaker in the late 50's, which, I believe, is still made, in some form, today.
Re:"Doppler shift" (Score:1)
Re:Like electrostats... (Score:1)
Re:I know when I hear Korean stereo equipment (Score:1)
Re:I know when I hear Korean stereo equipment (Score:1)
Re:I know when I hear Korean stereo equipment (Score:1)
Historicaly.... (Score:1)
Loudpaper was supposed to be a wallpaper that you could jack your stero into, turing a whole wall into a speaker. Sounds like John's smiling down on this one.
This has been another useless post from....
Re:I don't think these are for Audiophiles... (Score:1)
Piezoelectric elements can be not only speakers but microphones... actually, due to the Heisenberg principle, ANY speaker can also be a microphone (and any LED a light sensor, etc. It breaks down for some of todays components, like electrolytic capacitors or almost anything involving semiconductor technology)... so they could print the entire phone on paper... Now if only they could print my monitor on rice paper as well... <G>
I found the research lab's website here [kist.re.kr], but couldn't find anything about this technology... anyone else find it?
Backwards (Score:2)
Does Martin Logan already have something similar? (Score:1)
BTW they sound great.
Re:You fail to see what the marketroids will do... (Score:2)
Paper thin material that is good for base rumbling. I see the condom industry latching on to this one.
Cones Flats. (Score:2)
Also, I have here with me a set of Monsoon MM1000s, which are flat panel speakers. Compared to my ($1400, not the best but good IMHO) stereo system at home they sound like crap, however I'm currently in France and I wasn't going to bring my huge towers with me. The flat panels are great for portibility, and considering their size they're really good sounding too. The problem is that you still need an amp for all of this, and the flat panels cannot produce low notes very well at all, so you'll also need a subwoofer.
In any case, speaking as a pseudo-audiophile, in my experience real speakers are still FAR ahead in the game when it comes to raw sound quality. If you want something easy to hook up to your TV or computer to play quake or listen to MP3s, then you can get by on something like this. However if you want quality then you still have to use conventional speakers, and I can't see that changing any time soon, but then again, what do I know [howstuffworks.com]?
I saw 21 U.S.Marines, in full dress, with rifles, fire a gun salute to the outgoing president, and every last one of them missed!
It's been done since the 1970s (Score:2)
The koreans are making one huge misrepresentation, though. These speakers will never roll up, then unfold and just tack to the wall. You MUST keep the film taut in order to produce optimal sound. If you bend the films, the surface coatings break. And read the article closely. They haven't "invented" any new speaker technology, they've invented a new way to bond the electrodes to the surface. Whoop de doo.
great. (Score:5)
riding the subway is hard enough already!!
that said, think of the applications for screwing with people if you could make your sweater talk... or a window... or a mirror.... oh my.
sorry, need to go make devilish plans...