Why are there so many wooden box speakers out there?


I understand that wood is cheap and a box is easier to make than a sphere but when the speaker companies charge tens if not hundreds of thousands of dollars for their speakers, shouldnt consumers expect more than just a typical box? Are consumers being duped?

Back in the 70’s a speaker engineer found that a sphere was best for a speaker. A square box was the worst and a rectangular box was marginally better.

The speaker engineers have surely known about this research so why has it been ignored?

Cabasse is the only company doing spheres. Should wooden boxes be made illegal

kenjit

Kenjet,

Please help me understand your question. You asked why companies use wood to make speakers and people have answered you. But you don’t seem to be interested in anyone’s answers. Maybe you should either try to rephrase your question or maybe it’s time just to move on. 

And in other news, hundreds arrested for feeding internet trolls. 

@kenjit

Do you not find it the least bit suspicious that the materials and methods used to make high end speakers also happen to be the cheapest? Are we being duped?

High-end Magico use complex construction of machined aluminium with carbon-fibre composite. Wilson use their own proprietary high-mass composites. Audio Physic use MDF, low-mass honeycomb composite, rigid ceramic foam, elastomer and glass. And so on.

The goal is to make sure the speaker does not sing. You use whatever is most neutral.

The Olson paper measures and describes the effects of speaker and baffle shape with respect to diffraction and resulting frequency response measured in a free field room at a distance (per fig.3 in the paper) and the frequency response range is also (figs.6-17) clearly indicated. That research doesn’t deal with resonances or internal wave/reflection behaviour per se (although those effects may influence the measured results).

I provided the link to the work by Olson which someobody tried to dismiss by saying it was limited range of measurement and single point microphone which is hogwash. He then contradicted himself by citing examples of speakers that have a shape thats nearly spherical. So he cant make up his mind whether spheres are right or wrong.

That poster described those aspects of the paper accurately, agreed with you that the research was informative and she suggested more research in that area would be interesting. That isn’t in any way contradicted by citing examples of near- or semi-sphrerical speakers.

If you are determined to make everyone who responds to you wrong, there wouldn’t be any point in continuing to reply. Maybe confirm whether you want discussion or are just irrationally venting ...

Wood boxes are easy to make. Complex shapes are way more costly and the question is if the complex shape is worth the cost compared to the cost of better drivers and crossovers. Also we are used to boxes and visually accept them. Other shapes wouldn't sell as well since they would be odd so many would not accept them. 

P.S there may be better shapes than the wood box but I doubt there is a 'perfect' one.

@axo1989

I can see there are speaker companies out there that dont use wood. But the issue here is not just about the material its the shape. Magicos are RECTANGULAR BOXES. Even worse they deceptively try to make their speakers look round by adding curves but its not even close to a sphere. Its as if they know their speakers should be spheres but because they cant be bothered they just stick to boxes and hope audiophiles can be persuaded theyre just as good.

The Olson paper measures and describes the effects of speaker and baffle shape with respect to diffraction, that research doesn’t deal with resonances or internal wave/reflection behaviour per se (although those effects may influence the measured results)..

Nobody said it was dealing with internal resonances. Resonances will always be there regardless of shape and will need to be dealt with in some other way. The olson paper is correct and the speakers companies are wrong.

That poster described those aspects of the paper accurately, agreed with you that the research was informative and she suggested more research in that area would be interesting. That isn’t in any way contradicted by citing examples of near- or semi-sphrerical speakers.

Well in which case just admit that 99% of speakers out there are wrong because they arent spheres. You cant make a rectangular box behave like a sphere. Its one or the other. Make up your mind which is better and stop being ambivalent.

By far the most natural sounding speakers I’ve ever heard are recent Wilson Audios. They have paid attention to time alignment for decades, and refined the cabinet materials to dramatically reduce cabinet vibration, minimizing distortion. I don’t know where you got the sphere info, but go listen to a live symphony, and then a pair of Alex Vs. I think everyone can hear what is more or less realistic.

Wood boxes are easy to make. Complex shapes are way more costly and the question is if the complex shape is worth the cost compared to the cost of better drivers and crossovers. 

Those reasons are all WRONG and do not justify non spherical cabinets. There are different prices for speakers yes? So if you go up in price you rightly expect an improvement in terms of the materials and shapes used no? A box may have been acceptable for a cheap speaker but it is no longer acceptable when the speaker costs tens of thousands of bucks. Why is that so hard to admit? Just face it, we are being duped. How dare you claim that complex shapes are more costly to make as if consumers arent already being charged extortionate prices for those monkey coffins?

I myself was SHOCKED to hear steel guitars are actually made of wood. Now that's a ripoff! 🎸

@dynamiclinearity You can build the most complex shapes out of plywood and a CNC machine. Glue many layers of precision-cut plywood together and build a wavy 1/4 wave transmission line. Build a box around that transmission line. That’s how my speakers are made.

 

Hello Kenjit.  Wooden box speakers are traditional, easy to pack and ship, easy to place in a home (flat bottoms), easy to put things on (flat tops), easy to mount speakers (the actual drivers + crossover parts) in (flat fronts and backs), easy to "tune," easy to build. If you build it with stone slabs (counter tops broken during fabrication are available cheap. The shop can cut the pieces and holes for you.) you will have and acoustically inert box that will not sound "boxy," and can look quite impressive. Glue it together with silicone rubber. Open baffel speakers are lighter and cheaper (especially DIY) to build, but harder to place in a room. Happy Listening!

I'm the first person to agree that savvy marketing and the canny wooing of the right review journals can have an enormous and sometimes deleterious effect on consumer choice; that people more often than not want what they're told to want whether it's good for them or not. But in this case I think you have to be a bit realistic. 

We--by which I mean people on this forum--are a minority who will sometimes go to absurd lengths, both financial and aesthetic, in pursuit of audio perfection. Most people want something that sounds nice and looks good, and the simple fact is that wood looks nice and rectangular shapes tend to fit better into people's living rooms. Here, I think, is a case of manufacturer's giving people what they want, not, as the OP suggests, duping them.

I should, however, declare an interest. My Sonus Faber speakers look fabulous and have just reached the point after about eight months of hitting a perfect and exquisite synergy with the rest of my system; plus my wife thinks they're really pretty--a not inconsequential consideration for those of us who do not possess dedicated listening rooms to which we can retreat!

 

I’m going off topic here, but rounded shapes are preferable for living room decor. You’ll get very subtle anxiety in a room with only square shapes. It’s soothing to the mind and spirit to have more rounded shapes that you’ll likely encounter in nature.

It’s fine to have a few hard edges here and there, but you can break up the pattern with decor: pillows, candles, vessels, mirrors, plants, tables, plates, lamps, chairs etc...

I doubt that the square shape of a speaker is inherently desirable, it’s just practical.

I am so confused. A square is also a rectangle so how can a rectangle sound better than itself?

Why would any competent person use wood for anything let alone to build a box with! it's just a horrible mistake! I'm glad you pointed this out to us. I'll now get rid of all my wood. 

Guess one of the advantages of the spheres is that you will have smaller holes in your exterior walls for their placement vs those for a box wooden speaker. Yes , don’t forget that little kenjit nugget

Now we know why all the women or men in Kenjit’s life left him all alone. Lack of good wood ... ;-)

Why have a box or even an enclosure of any kind. Magnepan figured it out long ago. 

@kenjit 

So what shape are my Rockport Avior ii speakers considered to be ? 
 

Oh wait never mind. I don’t care what shape they are considered to be because they sound really F…..G good to me! 
 

Happy holidays everyone and happy listening!

KEF Blade

B&W (multiple)

Sonus Faber Venere 

Wilson (multiple)

Devialet

Bang and Olufsen

Gallo

Estelon Forza

Magnepan

And so on. Many play with shape but sometimes it's inside a box as well.  When the original tests on box speakers were done, much of the issue was that it was just an open box inside,  then stuffing was added (acoustical treatment). Then internal baffling,, and so on. Rear loaded horns don't sit well so often boxes are added. But in general a box is easier to work with,  and for many straight Clean lines are preferred.  So the "box works ". And if the ears are happy the soul is happy.  

Have read the referenced study and have a few comments.

The study references both diffraction and sound impedance of the enclosure for the speaker, but then creates enclosures where the volume of the enclosure and the distance of the speaker/piston to the furthest rear surface varies quite a bit, from 2 foot to 6 inches.   Without going through the full math of the impedance and reflection pressure on the speaker/piston for each shape used, the study is only partially conclusive.

Since the study does not include reference to any sound dampening material used within any of the enclosures, we have to assume that there is none. This should be required information for complete and accurate understanding of the results.

The material used for the various shapes, and the construction methods used are not detailed, so the shape information is only partially informative. The absorption and reflection properties of the material used and joining methods will affect the diffraction and impedance of each enclosure.

There is no charting/graph of the sample speaker free standing (no enclosure) for reference, so the charts graphs can only the used as comparison to each other. We do not know what the free air response of the sample speaker is for comparison to the enclosures.

The shapes/volume of enclosures for the size of speaker used would mostly argue for freestanding speakers. A speaker of 7/8 inch diameter (a tweeter) requiring a sphere of 2 foot diameter for a relatively flat response or a cubic volume of over 2 feet for a similar response would appear to require a massively sized enclosure for a full range speaker that would include at the minimum a second driver of at least 5 1/4 inch diameter. Thus one would conclude that freestanding speakers with a bare minimum of mounting surface would be best.

What the study does show is that enclosure volume will affect response curve. Distance from speaker to rear surface will affect response curve. Internal shape of enclosure will affect response curve. And the study hints that minimal front mounting surface may be beneficial to the response curve, but is confused by the various internal shapes and volumes to provide a clear conclusion.

Most all of this is known, and most all high end speakers use cabinet shaping, material, volume, and dampening for each individual driver to optimize the response curve of each driver, and the response curve of the speaker as a whole as a single point sound source. For those whose room volume, configuration and dampening are optimal then full planar or freestanding speakers can be the best, otherwise it is all compromise.

"They're instruments. They're allowed to be wooden. They are required to resonate"

My point exactly

Kenjit, I appreciate your question, but could you keep it to that - a question? And not make it into a battle where you know "the truth"? Is spherical always best? If that was the case, why are high level speakers showing an amazing variety of shapes and forms? Imagine if our forks and knives were subject to the same variation, we would hardly know how to eat! B&W Nautilus, for example, is partly snail shell shaped, partly spherical, partly other complex forms. A violin is partly straight, partly curved, part thin part thick. A stradivarius is not a globe! Nor is it made with cement! And why is that? Because sound doesn't behave to simplistic rules like 'spherical always best'. There are lots of people out there trying out new forms and shapes, and broad statements like 'wood is bad' or 'box is bad' won't help them. You think a speaker should not sing? It should have no sound of its own, and be absolutely inert? I remember that philosophy in the 80s, but it didn't conquer the market, for good reasons. You cannot avoid the sound from the drivers interacting with their surroundings. So another way to go about it, is to design cabinets that sound  musical, and  / or speakers designed to play "with" the room instead of trying to attain no interaction (impossible). 

On another level, the main speaker marketplace, I think you have a point, but you could make it without being fundamentalist about it. Yes, cost considerations may drive parts of the industry into 'sleepwalker' mode, repeating the old box designs, only in slimmer 'modern' versions (usually sounding worse). Yet the consumer market has rounded or spherical designs in active satellite systems too, I think, at least a midlevel company like Gallo.  Very "lifestyle" and if you can get a good deal with a metal maker you can make it. They seem to work well for treble and some midtone (snailhouse construction = trying to extend the mid downwards). But these globe-like speakers have not replaced the box type standmounts (or floorstanders). Why not? Imagine if your rule was true, Kenjit, and we all changed to speakers looking like spheres. Putting our old square boxes, panel speakers etc into the garage. I think we would all go to the garage, after awhile - something has gone missing. I don't know. And this is just to illustrate my point. Your question is good but don't make it into a sermon.

@kenjit,

Never mind the shape of speaker boxes. Did you ever consider adding apostrophes when you use contractions?

Breaking News!

New method completely eliminates the need for speaker enclosures!

We call it "The Speaker".

 

To improve the audio environment, just put Kenjit in a box, and of any shape or material you choose.

@o_holter 

You cannot use Gallo speakers to represent ALL spherical speakers. There are degrees of success with spherical speakers just as with boxes no? Some boxes are better than others and its the same with spheres. Just because we havent seen any good spheres yet doesnt mean theyre all bad. 

What about the cabasse spheres? They are one of the worlds best arent they? Is it a coincidence they are spheres? Why does Magico use curved cabinets if perfect square edges would suffice? Is it not to recognize the great wisdom of Master Kenjit and take a leaf out of his book?

Still not using apostrophes with contractions kenjit. Where did you go to school?

While we are on the topic, how about all those wooden violins, cellos, bongos , etc out there?   Someone needs to do something about that!   I nominate the OP.  Report back please when mission accomplished.  Thank you!

While we are on the topic, how about all those wooden violins, cellos, bongos , etc out there?   Someone needs to do something about that!   

They have to be wooden in order to produce sound. A concrete violin would make very little noise. A speaker box has to be silent. Only the cone needs to vibrate. However that has nothing to do with what we are discussing. The real problem is BOXES, wooden or not. I'd say get rid of all those boxes! 

"I'd say get rid of all those boxes!"

You would certainly be in the minority, but I guess you are used to that. 

This is an easy question.

Today the equipment to evaluate speakers can be purchased relatively quickly and with a modicum of knowledge anybody can create a set of speakers using this software/hardware.

 

Box speaker work well enough;  I have my preference for some of the panel speakers that create a great sound stage (although I can't afford the electrostatics I really want).    But I can get by with box speakers, particularly when I just want to listen to background music.

Kenji makes some well-rounded arguments.  I, for one, wooden go against his premise.

All I wanna know is if round coffins are going to be a thing and how would the pallbearers carry it? Would they just roll it over to the plot and would they still be made of wood?

All the best,
Nonoise