
The holy grail of loudspeaker design has always been to
generate big bass from small boxes. The trouble is, the
laws of physics make this almost impossible to achieve,
as bass extension relates directly to efficiency and cabinet
size.
Continuing a 40-year tradition of genuine design innovation,
KEF engineers have now developed a way of overcoming this
apparently insoluble limitation. It's called Acoustic Compliance
Enhancement (ACE), and it works like this. In conventional
speakers, cone motion is restricted by the acoustic pressure
in the enclosure as the air is alternately compressed and
expanded by the cone moving in and out. The smaller the
enclosure, the greater the pressure that acts on the cone.
By dramatically reducing this pressure, ACE allows the cone
to move as freely as it would in a much larger cabinet,
generating bass extension out of all proportion to its actual
size. This is achieved by introducing granules of activated
carbon into the enclosure - a material containing millions
of pores ranging in size from visible fissures to holes
a few molecules across.
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