I mean that the most critical portion of the audio band for understanding speech is 350Hz-3500Hz.
I'm sure there must be some AES article that has tested all this. The wiki definition of voice frequency is just lacking for me. Just how long ago was this freq range decided, back in the days of Alexander Graham Bell, and it has stuck since then? I'm sure he was smarter than me by magnitudes.
To use your metaphor: the note is more important than the instrument.
There is on argument about what is the topic: intelligibility.
There is no argument about what the topic at hand is.
Lower frequency speakers would have been possible. The were deemed unnecessary to the primary goal of the telephone: the conveyance of information through speech.
There is a distinct difference between what is or was possible, and what is done in practice. A Bose speaker has an F3 of what, 250hz? That is more than an octave above my normal speaking voice frequency. I assume that a Bose speaker/driver is larger than what is in most phones, and probably by a lot.
So if you are going to try it: try it. Go into your EQ and set 350-3500HZ all the way down (and anything else you like all the way up) and listen to some conversation.
Then reverse and try again.
Remember: legibility, not pleasantness.
NO.
Either of the below are much better comparisons.
The full range of frequencies created by the spoken voice VS Only the harmonics of said voice that reside above 350hz.
OR
The fundamental, plus ALL harmonics that are BELOW 350hz VS Only harmonics that reside above 350hz.
You are positive that both of the above will be in favor of only harmonics that reside above 350hz?
That you will always continue to tell people that dialog exists between 350-3000hz
by definition as you have already done in this thread? Even when the FUNDAMENTALS for BOTH men and women are ALL below 350hz, and that's not even mentioning that the strongest harmonics for at least men will still be below 350hz? (edit: ok I see you may have now changed your definition to "critical portion".)
Bah.
I have surmised that my natural speaking voice has the fundamental (the most pronounced tone
BY FAR of the various tones/harmonics that come out of body) range of 90-100hz. With harmonic series, the next most prominent will be the second harmonic, which will then lie around 180-200hz (still below 350hz). After that one, the next most prominent harmonic would be 270-300hz, again we are still below 350hz. The harmonics that would come above 350hz would all be lesser in strength than these.
I have however come across formants, which are the specific harmonics created in the vocal appartus. I am guessing it is these that might be the focus of the 350-3500 range.
Again, a question I ask is if this is more intended to recognize the individual on the other end than it does with intelligibility, as I am guessing it is the formants that allow us to distinguish who is talking on the other end of the line.