squeak9798
5,000+ posts
Banned
What you are describing is sensitivity though.I put a baseball on a tee, like I'm 4 years old again. I take a bat and swing at a 5lb ball with a given amount of force. The ball travels a distance relative to the weight of the ball and the amount of force I applied with the bat (just trying to keep things simple here). What if we use a 50lb ball and all other factors remain constant? Do we really think the ball is going to travel at the same velocity at any point in it's flight?
That doesn't mean the driver won't be able to respond to the signal properly (i.e. move 50 cycles per second for a 50hz tone)....it just won't be able to move as far in each direction in order to accomplish this (if we hold power constant).
What if we replace you with the Incredible Hulk in your example? I bet then we'll be able to get that ball to fly as far........
I agree with the point you are getting at, I think, which is that inductance isn't the ONLY factor. Mass is going to affect transient response via Q and manifest itself as overshoot and ringing, etc. But inductance is going to be the limiting factor on the impulse response, not the weight.
Though it's also worth noting that even though larger cones are typically "heavier" than smaller cones...due to other factors such as the increased cone area sensitivity for the larger driver will typically be higher than it is for the smaller driver with the lighter cone.
Great thread;
http://www.elitecaraudio.com/forums/showthread.php?threadid=106037