Hi there,
In the past few weeks I've been posing questions that on the surface are pretty easy to understand but to understand the "why" or "how" behind it becomes far more fascinating.
At least I am fascinated by it. But to understand this fully I need to ask more questions.
A week ago I posed a question because I was unsure about digital signals being AC as members at AVSforum seem to think that digital signals are AC with a DC bias offset. But the bottom line is that the signal that runs from the cables to your speaker is AC. It
has to be otherwise the cone would not move according to the direction of current, and no sound would result.
Apparently DC can carry no information so it would be fallacious to state that digital signals are DC. At least I would think so. But the DC signal that the amp amplifies is turned into AC by the transistors I would imagine.
That is that.
So now I ask a different question concerning two things so that I understand it fully. One is current flow and the other are two magnetics in the speaker attracting and repelling on another.
Current will reverse polarity depending on frequency. Music is obviously dynamic and consists of thousands of frequencies and so current will reverse polarity thousands of times per second or hundreds of times, depending on the musical signal.
My question is, the current that changes direction is a product of the electromagnet attracting and repelling (because it has a north and a south pole) the positive north pole of the permanent magnet and repels on the negative pole of the electromagnet.
Because I was thinking about this the other day and I was getting slightly confused with two things. On the one hand, we have two magnets, one a temporary electromagnet that can only exist or produce an electromagnetic field if it is interacting with a permanent magnetic field.
So we have repulsion and attraction. But then we also have current flow reversing direction based on polarity of the signal. So we have the positive cycle and the negative cycle of current flow and this will cause the cone to move out and in depending on the cycle.
So in other words, there are two parts to the equation. I just need to understand how they fit in a bit better. Is the cone changing direction because of the current flow and is the current flow direction caused by the two magnets attracting and repelling.
If we had both EM and PM and a DC current then direction of the coil would only move in one direction. Because there can be no attraction and repulsion because current in this case has a non-varying polarity ?
If someone more knowledgable in this area could explain to me how the current flow direction (AC) works in conjunction with the two magnetics, and in what step this occurs, I would really appreciate it.
Thanks for hearing me out !
--Regards,