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Magnet Question
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<blockquote data-quote="audioholic" data-source="post: 5066199" data-attributes="member: 549629"><p>The suspension will only affect mechanical power handling, which I assume is being ignored in this discussion, as its dictated easily as much by the enclosure as it is by the speaker itself.</p><p>A speaker works via electromagnetism. The magnet(s) portion of the motor is simply the fixed portion of the electromagnet. The coil being polarized by current flow is the moving portion of the electromagnet. Polarize the coil to repell one way or the other against the fixed magnets in the motor, and you have cone excursion. But as said above, its the coil size/shape/material/design/cooling/etc that affects how much current can pass through this electromagnet, not the size of the fixed magnets.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="audioholic, post: 5066199, member: 549629"] The suspension will only affect mechanical power handling, which I assume is being ignored in this discussion, as its dictated easily as much by the enclosure as it is by the speaker itself. A speaker works via electromagnetism. The magnet(s) portion of the motor is simply the fixed portion of the electromagnet. The coil being polarized by current flow is the moving portion of the electromagnet. Polarize the coil to repell one way or the other against the fixed magnets in the motor, and you have cone excursion. But as said above, its the coil size/shape/material/design/cooling/etc that affects how much current can pass through this electromagnet, not the size of the fixed magnets. [/QUOTE]
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