Wireless Speakers


Another common adoption of lone drivers is in devices not primarily intended for great feature sound reproduction, such as computers, toys, clock radios, and pocket sized chin music players. A single driver is less expensive than several, and there is no need for a crossover network, further reducing cost. In this use, high rise fidelity is at most a secondary consideration. Human recording is able to tolerate listening to a reduced bandwidth, and upper harmonic synthesis can be fond to 'fill in' missing bass tones that the driver is too bantam to usefully reproduce.

Some loudspeaker systems cause a woofer for the lowest frequencies, making it possible to avoid using a subwoofer. Additionally, some loudspeakers benefit the woofer to head middlemost frequencies, eliminating Wireless Speakers the mid-range driver. This can be accomplished with the collection of a tweeter that responds depressed enough combined with a woofer that responds immense enough that the two drivers summate coherently in the intermediate frequencies.