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Speaker Installation Considerations
Music is a vital
part of boating pleasure for many people.
But obtaining high-quality music on a boat
is sometimes difficult. For optimum sound,
you need more than just a good stereo, you
need high quality marine speakers that are
properly installed. Follow these principles
to ensure the best quality sound on your
boat, and to save yourself future repair
and replacement work.
Flush Mount or Outdoor Box Speakers?
Speakers that require a cutout (flush mount)
and speakers that don't. Box speakers have
the obvious advantage that they don't require
you to cut a hole in your boat. But they
take up more space than flush mount speakers
and can be cumbersome in a busy cockpit.
Box speakers typically are installed in
an acoustically-designed enclosure around
the driver to provide a structured resonance
space for optimum performance. They are
easy to install and you can feel comfortable
that the sound you heard in the showroom
will be similar to the sound you hear on
your boat.
You might choose flush mount speakers because
they are attractive, can be installed in
tight spaces and out of the way on most
activity. However, proper mounting can be
tricky. Speakers work by moving a diaphragm
(cone) back and forth to move air and generate
sound. An air space that is too small will
inhibit movement of the diaphragm and result
in a serious loss of low frequency response.
Also, make certain there is no air path
between the front and rear of the speaker.
When the diaphragm moves forward, air will
rush into the vacuum behind the speaker
instead of traveling to your ear, again
resulting in loss of low frequency response.
Waterproof Outdoor Speakers a Must
Home or automobile speakers have steel frames
and grilles, exposed copper wires and, in
some cases, paper cones. All of these features
are a problem on a boat: steel rusts, copper
corrodes, and paper dissolves. Since salt
air is the main environmental problem, waterproof
speakers should be used below decks as well
as in the cockpit.
Installation
Outdoor speakers are directional. When installing
speakers on deck, be careful to point them
toward the place your ears will be. Below
deck, direction is less crucial, since there
are many reflective surfaces to contain the
sound.
We recommend using 18-gauge wire when connecting
the system. Tinned marine wire is best,
although doorbell wire works well. It is
inexpensive, comes in pairs, and isn't stranded,
so there is less surface area to corrode.
Since copper wire is very vulnerable to
corrosion, you should seal all wires between
the insulation and soldered area. Liquid
electrical tape is excellent for this application.
Make sure positive terminals on speakers
are matched with the positive side of the
stereo output; i.e., they are connected
"in phase." Speakers that are "out of phase"
because some connecting wires are reversed
will result in some tones canceling each
other out and an audible reduction in sound
quality.
Speakers connections out of phase will not
physically harm the stereo or the speakers.
If you are not sure which speaker terminal
is positive, place a AA or AAA battery across
the terminals. When the positive terminal
of the battery touches the positive terminal
of the speaker, the speaker cone will move
forward.
Placement
Until now, installing speakers within 5
feet of compasses, autopilots or other navigation
gear was a problem. The magnetic flux produced
by an operating speaker could affect compass
readings and any other equipment interfaced
with the compass. Now, with poly-planar®'s
exclusive new ultra-low magnetic field speakers,
maintaining the 5 foot distance is no longer
necessary. The low magnetic field technology
uses a canceling magnet and a shielded enclosure
to reduce the magnetic flux caused by the
speaker. Ultra-low magnetic field speakers
in poly-planar®'s line include all of
the 4000 Series Round Integral Grille (MA4054,
4055, 4056 and 4600) and the MA5500 rectangular
flush mount models, an ideal upgrade for
the MA505 popular with many boaters worldwide.
Installation Considerations
Speakers are directional: Point them at
your ears. A speaker produces the best sound
along its central axis. Sound radiates in
a pattern approximately 45 degrees off the
main axis. If you are not in this radiating
zone, the sound must bounce off a reflecting
surface in order to be heard. Below deck,
this is usually not a problem, as space
is typically quite small and there are plenty
of reflecting surfaces. However, above deck,
reflecting surfaces are limited. When mounting
speakers, try to imagine where your ears
will be located when listening, and try
to point the speakers toward your ears.
Location affects both the volume and the
quality of the sound you hear, since different
frequencies disburse with different efficiencies.
Flush-mount speakers need air behind them.
Don't choke your sound. In general, more
air is better. If you have less than one
cubic foot of air behind your speakers,
you are at risk of inhibiting the bass response.
Sound is a compression wave which is created
when the speaker cone moves in and out.
If the air cavity behind the speaker is
too small, cone movement is inhibited by
the vacuum created in the cavity when the
cone moves outward. Likewise, pressure is
created when the cone moves inward, which
also slows cone movement. The result is
a loss of bass response, since low frequencies
re-quire the largest air movement.
Separate the air in the front of the speaker
from the air behind it. Don't use your speaker
in "free air". As a speaker cone moves forward,
it creates positive air pressure in front
of the cone, which eventually reaches your
eardrums and enables you to hear the sound.
At the same time, the forward movement of
the cone also creates a vacuum behind the
cone. If there is no baffle (wall) separating
the front of the speaker from the back of
the speaker, the positive air pressure at
the front of the cone will rush around the
edge of the speaker and fill in the vacuum
behind the cone. This positive pressure
will not reach your ear, which has the effect
of dramatically reducing bass response.
This condition, known as "free air response",
is the reason why unmounted speakers may
lack bass response and sound "tinny."
Your speakers should be able to handle more
power than your stereo can produce, so you
don't blow your speakers. A speaker's power
handling specification is a measure of the
point at which the speaker will fail if
more than the specified power is applied.
On a stereo, the power specification is
the maximum amount of power the stereo will
produce. If the stereo can produce more
power than the speakers can handle, you
run the risk of blowing out your speakers
at high volume. If you have a high power
stereo and low power speakers, a useful
precaution is to wire an in-line fuse to
one side of each speaker line. [To calculate
the size of the fuse, divide the speaker's
RMS watts by four. The square root of that
quotient equals the size of the fuse required.]
Power ratings can be confusing because power
can be specified in several ways, all of
which are expressed in watts. See Power-in
the Glossary for more information. Use RMS
power for comparison purposes whenever possible.
Be sure to compare the per channel power
of the stereo with the per speaker power
of the speakers. Note that when two or more
speakers are connected to the same channel
of the stereo, the speakers will share the
power - two 20 watt speakers will handle
a total of 40 watts, three 20 watt speakers
will handle 60 watts, etc. You do not gain
low power sound quality by increasing the
maximum power handling of your speakers.
A one-watt signal will not sound any better
played on 100 watt speakers than it will
on 10 watt speakers. The most critical factor
affecting sound quality is the size of the
main cone: the larger the cone, the better
the bass response. back
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