@daveyf
Yes, several times. Either it’s crickets, or sorry not invented here. Heck, I even tried through an order form out of desperation, after posting this originally.
While they have a devoted following, and their customers would love dearly to help them, they seem immune to reason; almost cult like.
I’ll even throw them a bone here: No reasonable engineer would design a sound panel with square corners, for the same reason airplane windows are not square, or that junctions between two planes are vastly stronger with fillets: corners magnify vibrations and create vectors for sympathetic vibrations, and they are a major weakness in mechanical design.
No one currently working on the planer model of speakers that I know of seems to notice that the sympathetic vibrations and standing waves generated in the membrane on the panel are a result of those corners, just as audiophiles understand that standing waves in a room generated by parallel walls and uniform depth combine to destroy coherent sound.
So in the domain of planar speaker patents, that one just left the building because it’s now in the public domaine, if it wasn’t already.
Most people have no idea how time consuming researching prior art is, so no, I wasn’t going to bother considering the changes I’m making to my panels is just for my personal enrichment.
Yes, several times. Either it’s crickets, or sorry not invented here. Heck, I even tried through an order form out of desperation, after posting this originally.
While they have a devoted following, and their customers would love dearly to help them, they seem immune to reason; almost cult like.
I’ll even throw them a bone here: No reasonable engineer would design a sound panel with square corners, for the same reason airplane windows are not square, or that junctions between two planes are vastly stronger with fillets: corners magnify vibrations and create vectors for sympathetic vibrations, and they are a major weakness in mechanical design.
No one currently working on the planer model of speakers that I know of seems to notice that the sympathetic vibrations and standing waves generated in the membrane on the panel are a result of those corners, just as audiophiles understand that standing waves in a room generated by parallel walls and uniform depth combine to destroy coherent sound.
So in the domain of planar speaker patents, that one just left the building because it’s now in the public domaine, if it wasn’t already.
Most people have no idea how time consuming researching prior art is, so no, I wasn’t going to bother considering the changes I’m making to my panels is just for my personal enrichment.