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Published April 15, 2005

 

Building a Speaker at Audio Products International

Many parts go into the average modern loudspeaker. Metal, wire, magnets, wood, plastic, resistors, capacitors, inductors -- they’re all in there, but most speaker makers these days use many parts manufactured by outside vendors. Some purchase complete speaker drivers (woofers, tweeters) from other companies; others have the cabinets built for them. Smaller speaker manufacturers often outsource all of the production work and focus strictly on design. Because so many pieces are involved and the manufacturing techniques for each vary -- the number of required machines alone is enormous -- there are few places in the world where you can see a speaker built from scratch under one roof, and Audio Products International, in Toronto, Ontario, is one of them.

I was lucky enough to get a tour of API’s massive, 165,000-square-foot factory, which employs almost 300 people and churns out speakers under the brand names of Athena Technologies, Energy, and Mirage. SoundStage! covered the basics of the production facility a few years ago. Rather than cover that ground again, I decided to follow the production line for a single speaker all the way through to see how all its pieces were assembled.

The day I visited, the factory was making Energy encore2 satellites. This compact two-way speaker has a 4" woofer and 1" tweeter and retails for $350/pair USD. It is often sold as part of the Energy encore6 home-theater system, with matching encore1 center-channel and encore8 subwoofer, all for $999.

Speaker driver assembly

While the materials used continue to improve, the basic design of a woofer hasn’t changed in a long time. The speaker cone is connected to a voice coil, a small cylinder of wire connected to an amplifier’s output. As electricity passes through it, the coil becomes magnetically charged. The resulting magnetic field either attracts or repels a larger magnet surrounding the coil. Those magnetic interactions move the coil -- and the cone attached to it -- in and out, which in turn moves the air to produce soundwaves. There are a few other parts involved to help control the motion of the cone, such as the spider and the suspension. A good animated diagram showing the basic parts of a woofer can be found at http://electronics.howstuffworks.com/speaker5.htm.

The first step in building a woofer is to wind (by machine) a precise length of wire around a metal cylinder core to build the voice coil. That coil is then glued into the center of the spider, as shown here:

Note the orange voice-coil wire in the center. The driver’s spider is the yellow ring. The spider helps keep the coil centered while also preventing it from traveling too far vertically from the speaker magnet. The resulting subassembly is then wrapped with a magnet below and the cone above to make the completed driver.

This is the 4" woofer of the encore2. You can see a hint of the yellow spider assembly in the middle, showing how the parts shown in the preceding picture fit. The voice coil, in the center, is glued to the bottom of the speaker cone, which is then glued to the speaker basket with the rubber surround. The cone is made of multilaminated aluminum polycarbonate (the same strong plastic, marketed as Lexan, of which bulletproof windows are made), the magnet of neodymium. The surround is made of rubber -- a big improvement over the older, foam type, providing more consistent damping and longer life. (Foam tends to disintegrate after a decade or two.) On the left side, the speaker magnet is just below the spider, with the voice coil in the center of the magnet. To magnetically shield the encore2, a second magnet is attached to the one driving the speaker, wired in reverse polarity in order to cancel the first magnet’s magnetic field. A metal cup (the shiny, silverish part on the left in this picture) is placed on the outside of these two magnets. The cup further damps the field and protects the magnets.

Tweeters are constructed similarly, albeit with much smaller parts, as high frequencies don’t require moving as much air. This means you can use a small dome, such as the 1" aluminum dome of the encore2, instead of a large cone. The suspension of the encore2’s tweeter is made of cloth.

Designers have many ways of fine-tuning a speaker driver’s sound:

  • Change the length or wire gauge of the voice-coil wire
  • Use a different magnet
  • Alter the size or placement of the voice coil in the gap of the magnet it slides into
  • Change the stiffness or material of the cone or spider
  • Change the type of rubber used in the surround

Such adjustments can change the frequency range the speaker operates over, the efficiency with which it plays, and many other parameters. As one example, drivers with metal cones and domes, such as those we’re looking at here, are more rigid than those made from paper or plastic. This means they distort less as they’re moved, and can handle more power. The downside is that, like anything else made of metal, a metal driver can ring. Usually speaker drivers are built so that the frequency at which the driver rings is well above the upper limit of the frequency range it is designed to reproduce, but the ringing can still be very loud at that point. This normally is compensated for by using the speaker’s crossover to block that frequency.

The ability to adjust all these parameters and manufacture a custom driver to specification means that API’s speaker designers can build working prototypes of new designs in a few hours. At most speaker companies, getting a prototype of a new driver design might take days or weeks, especially when, as is frequently the case, the drivers are made overseas. Being able to do this in-house is a major design advantage for API.

Cabinet components

Here, a piece of 0.5" medium-density fiberboard (MDF), the most popular material used for speaker cabinets, has been machined to make four sides of the speaker enclosure. Making as much of the speaker as possible out of a single piece of MDF helps make the enclosure more solid, and reduces cabinet vibrations and air leakage at high volume levels.

Once the enclosure is folded into position, only one seam needs to be glued, which makes for excellent cosmetics as well as better sound. Every seam in a speaker cabinet is another place air can escape, which reduces bass quantity and quality. The machining necessary to get this much precision from fiberboard is impressive, and virtually demands a big production line. Nowadays, computer numerically controlled (CNC) tools do much of the actual milling. One reason larger manufacturers can now build small speakers so economically is because they can afford to amortize the machine-setup charges over many more units. It would be extremely difficult to match this level of assembly detail in a normal woodworking shop, which wouldn’t be able to afford the cash and/or the space for a large CNC machine.

These plastic plates for the speaker’s front and rear panels are made from an injection-molded composite resin; a ring of nitrile rubber (NBR) is used to reduce the vibration of the drivers against the plastic. Plastic parts this complicated require expensive tooling to be produced inexpensively -- another area where a large number of units must be made before the initial setup charge can be profitably amortized. The exact shape and size of the enclosure near the speaker drivers, particularly the tweeter, can dramatically change how a speaker’s output is dispersed into the room; many of today’s speaker designers carefully sculpt this part of the speaker for better performance. API does farm out the production of these plastic parts; injection molding is an industry entirely different from what they focus on. Still, this doesn’t inconvenience the design team too much; the front baffle has fewer interacting parts to fiddle with than other parts of a speaker, so it’s possible to use CNC technology to prototype front panels out of wood for initial testing.

Note the surprising complexity of the crossover for a two-way speaker in this price range: two inductors, two capacitors, and three resistors. It’s not unusual to find an inexpensive speaker with a single capacitor (blocks low frequencies) for the tweeter and an inductor (blocks high frequencies) for the woofer. The encore2’s complicated crossover is part of what allows API to use the more temperamental metal cones. This illustration also shows how the speaker is built for maintenance in the field. Even after an encore2 has been assembled, you can pull the woofer out to replace or repair the crossover board.

Cabinet assembly

All of the parts above are glued together, and the MDF is covered with the ebony gloss laminate that gives this speaker its interesting industrial look. API makes sure all panels are glued on consistently with a big, hydraulic panel-stamping machine that applies pressure evenly over all surfaces of the enclosure -- again, any air leaks will decrease the overall quality of sound. A detail you don’t see in any of these pictures is that the rear of the encore2’s cabinet includes a mounting bracket that lets the speaker be hung on a wall. At a total weight of only six pounds, it doesn’t take much to hold this speaker up, and using this bracket with the matching encore2 stand lets you adjust the angle at which the speaker points toward the listening position.

The finished product

One interesting thing you can see here is that the woofer is actually slightly larger than the wooden part of the enclosure. There are some dispersion-related design advantages to making a speaker cabinet as narrow as possible, not to mention the cosmetic value of a smaller box, and the custom plastic front baffle lets API cut a fraction of an inch off the speaker’s width. When the speaker’s only 5.1" wide to begin with, that means a lot.

Each encore2 then goes through several rounds of testing to ensure that it matches the reference design within the tolerances API will accept. API writes their own testing software, including modules that guess at what’s wrong with a failed speaker -- for example, flagging the tweeter as the source of the problem. Each speaker is tested to ensure that its frequency response matches that of the reference; that it will be able to hold up under high power inputs; that all of the gluing and other steps of the assembly process that we’ve seen can handle real-world use. Each Energy speaker leaves the factory with a five-year warranty; API wants to be sure that it will survive at least that long.

What I’ve skipped in this article are the design stages, which at API are integrated into all the other processes. API’s main offices are in the same building as the factory, so the design engineers can easily get their hands on the manufacturing side of things, and vice versa. I used to design shop-floor computer equipment, and I know that few things motivate an engineer to produce a bulletproof design as much as the knowledge that an angry mob of assemblers and machinists flummoxed by your design glitch can find your office in a couple of minutes, before their torches have burned out. Nor can it be overstated how helpful it is to a designer to be able to get instant feedback about a proposed change. At API, a morning change to a driver design can be turned into a new speaker by the afternoon, and placed in their anechoic chamber for complete measurements by the end of the day. That dramatically speeds the whole design process.

Mass production nowadays is often synonymous with low quality. It’s refreshing to see the benefits of large-scale manufacturing being used to create products as solid as those from API’s Athena, Energy, and Mirage loudspeaker lines. Nor is the Energy encore2 the least expensive speaker that comes out of the API facility. A pair of Athena AS-B1s stand out in my mind as being one of the best ways you can spend $180 on audio equipment. I look forward to new products from API even more now that I’ve seen the care they put into building them.

...Greg Smith


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