Actually it's pure physics. If you push one speaker in carefully in a
unit that has no power connected, the other will pop out nearly the same
amount. It's an air-tight enclosure where the bass woofers are the only
moving parts connecting the inside of the case to the surrounding air.
This also means, if one bass moves, e.g. from my sample that plays a
frequency just on one side, the other base is passively moving along
with that. And thereby causing sound, even though it is not driven by
anything but the vacuum and pressure generated by the bass on the other
side. That makes it impossible to check both speakers separately as long
as the case with its air-tight seal is opened.
A "mono" bass where both channels are exactly in phase might cancel
itself out because both speakers try to push simultaneously out which
creates a stronger internal vacuum, and pull in simultaneously creates
the respective amount of pressure. This makes bass movement considerably
hard. That's where they do some DSP trickery, I think. Putting the bass
just a little out of phase on one side might resolve this for good,
without a noticeable effect on what your ears perceive.
All this might be completely wrong but if it isn't, it makes the Boom a
true engineering marvel.



PN me if your Boom / Classic / Transporter display has issues!

LMS 7.9.0 on Windows Server 2012
1x Squezeebox Classic SB2
7x Squeezebox Classic SB3 (one waiting for repair)
7x Squeezebox Boom (two waiting for repair)
1x Transporter
2x Controller (one waiting for repair)
3x Touch (two waiting for repair)
1x Radio
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View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=107832

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