Thoughts for Future Speaker Designers


I put together a video of some design thoughts to consider.....

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--c0tiIZG6o


128x128soundsrealaudio
It doesn't seem to have anything to do with hi end audio, or even speakers for that matter.
" It doesn’t seem to have anything to do with hi end audio, or even speakers for that matter. " 

And it’s almost two years old. 

Soundsrealaudio, maybe you pasted the wrong link...??
Shoot, all he has to do is switch to electric motors. We have been filling speakers with acoustic cotton or poly for almost a century. Thoughts? The best enclosure is no enclosure ( except for subwoofers)
Putting the motors aside it is easy to see how the panels of a speaker act as " their own speaker" when back waves strike them. The discussion is also about composite vs single material for enclosure, and high mass vs low mass materials. Lots to consider. 
Personally, I'm working on getting rid of the enclosure entirely, except for the low fq.  Not a new concept, but taking my own approach.

As for 'noise' cancellation, unless it's a reasonably steady source one would have to employ a means of inverting the incoming sound(s) at a matching db. Get Smart's Cone of Silence comes to my mind...

Even if it could be set up to be 'selective' as to what needs to be canceled, it would likely damp 'wanted' fq as well.  Speech would make anyone within the field being effected sound very strange IMHO.

Set That up on your porch for Halloween.  The kids would think they've arrived a Real haunted house... ;)  "Trick or Treat", indeed.
...and even then, latency would be an issue with speech. How can you damp everything in RT?  There's bound to be some 'leakage' that would be experienced.  Noise-canceling headphones work on aircraft because the turbines and the fuselage of the craft are a form of white or pink noise, which is relatively easy to damp out.

"I may be wrong, but I could be right." *G*
The noise cancelation would be very difficult due to all the variations in frequency and volume. The takeaway from this video is how much  the cabinets add energy to the listening room. He also points out that a composite with low mass material would be ideal if it would strong with low flex. So perhaps heavy massive speakers do as much harm as good in terms of dealing with rear waves/energy.