Sounds like a marketing gimmick to me.Never heard of a coil for cone motion feedback before. Interesting.
It's not.Sounds like a marketing gimmick to me.
https://www.rythmikaudio.com/technology.htmlIt's not.
Why do you think it is?
It's no different than other forms of feedback used to improve a system's performance.
Motion feedback, such as adding an accelerometer to the cone or servo-control, is used to reduce the distortion and improve the frequency response of subwoofers.
The added winding also provides that feedback.








Mine has a 12" stiff cone that doesn't significantly distort unless seriously overdriven (which I have never observed).It works at low power before the small cone starts to deform, causing higher order distortion.
No such thing as overkill for our pleasure. That's a nice speaker you've got.Mine has a 12" stiff cone that doesn't significantly distort unless seriously overdriven (which I have never observed).
It's able to generate observable shaking of my sofa for large, low-frequency movie special effects sounds that I only partially hear, and it's located in a large open basement room.
It's quite adequate for my needs.
You obviously have a great system, but that would be overkill for me.
Changed my mind and they were still there. Got 'emI passed up a $30 pair of 7s at our local goodwill this past weekend.
They were (externally) perfect condition. I held them in my hands with deep nostalgia, then realized I had no use for them.

I just like wide dynamic range. I want the voices to be crystal clear and the booms/LFE/bass to be distinct and not clipped. That takes sizable power to listen at movie theater/concert levels. I want at least 3dB headroom at the loudest levels I listen too. A I've got lots of 24-bit 96kbs master recordings in DTS 5.1 and other encoding types.OK, golden eared folks, I can hear serious distortion, but I never push the speakers to where they add any that I can hear. And certainly my taste in music must be rather different. And in a free society I would not have it any other way!!

Excellent study or office speakers. Wise choice.Changed my mind and they were still there. Got 'em
View attachment 350284
Tested out fine. They sound brand new.
'84 date code, BTW. Good year.
Exactly. I think you are DSP territory to make use of it. Perhaps they actually do that and use a PID algorithm to control the cone position, but lt somehow I doubt it.But considering that it was probably providing velocity feedback, and considering that a coil moving in a magnetic field generates a voltage depending the VELOCITY
I sold hundreds of these in the 80s. They are dripping with nostalgia.Excellent study or office speakers. Wise choice.
Certainly you can get position from the velocity signal, and also allow for any non-linearity in the magnetic field.a coil moving in a magnetic field generates a voltage depending the VELOCITY,
Believe what you will.I cannot believe that money spent on that would not be better utilized in a better driver
According to one musician friend of mine, the speakers and every other part of the sound system, especially the amplifier, all wear out. Of course, that musician's technical education is less than my friends cat's technical education.Funny thing is, large bass speakers get better with age, like fine wine and old geezers.
They get softer around the edges and grow more mellow.
Yea, until they fail completely and need a foam ring replacement like my CV DX-9s did.Funny thing is, large bass speakers get better with age, like fine wine and old geezers.
They get softer around the edges and grow more mellow.
So does a properly tuned port, with higher efficiency.This reduces distortion, and extends and flattens the frequency response, eliminating the peaking and resulting boomy sound typical of many ported subwoofers.
Don't agree.So does a properly tuned port, with higher efficiency.
No, I am interested. Does the one you have use analog circuitry to convert the velocity feedback to positional, or a DSP, or something else? the link you gave was promoting a subwoofer driven by a servo motor!!! Now that is different, the feedback is directly related to position, unlike a feedback coil on the woofer.But, for some reason, you have a bug about woofers with motion feedback so I guess there's really nothing more to say.