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Schedule as of May 16, 2022 - subject to change

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LIVESTREAMS : A and B


ON DEMAND VIDEOS (previous days)
 
Thursday May 28, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
The proposed workshop/tutorial serves as a prequel to the
presentation on the history of dynamic loudspeakers given
at the 158th Convention (Warsaw, 2025). It focuses on the
earliest phase of consumer loudspeaker technology in the
1920s, prior to the widespread adoption of dynamic
loudspeakers in the mass market.

Loudspeakers had been in use since the mid-1910s for public
address applications, and the rapid global expansion of
broadcast radio soon brought loudspeakers into domestic
use. The 1920s constituted a period of rapid innovation in
loudspeaker design, preceding the introduction of the
dynamic loudspeaker, which achieved significant commercial
impact only in the latter part of the decade.

The workshop/tutorial will examine consumer loudspeaker
technologies of the 1920s, the concurrent advancements in
audio electronics and signal sources that enabled
subsequent developments, and the earliest efforts in
systematic loudspeaker theory and measurement.

Two loudspeaker types dominated this period: horn
loudspeakers driven by electromagnetic drivers similar to
those used in headphones and telephone receivers (with
headphones, particularly Baldwin models, also serving as
the basis for do-it-yourself loudspeakers), and open-baffle
cone loudspeakers, frequently actuated by electromagnetic
reed drivers.

Although these transducer technologies were rapidly
superseded during the following decade, the electromagnetic
loudspeaker era already featured multi-way loudspeakers
employing passive crossovers. Early measurements exposed
deficiencies in frequency response, leading to the
introduction of equalisation techniques, including notch
filters, to correct these responses.

Developments in amplification were equally significant. The
1920s saw the introduction of push-pull amplifiers
(described at the time as “distortionless”) and, as a key
contributor to improved bandwidth and reduced distortion,
new audio transformers derived from Bell Labs’ telephone
research. Amplifier power limitations nevertheless remained
a dominant constraint in loudspeaker design, resulting in
the widespread use of strong resonances to achieve high
sensitivity. Improvements in signal source quality from the
mid-1920s onwards — including advances in radio
transmission and the introduction of electrical disc
recording and playback — further increased the demand for
improved loudspeaker performance, ultimately contributing
to the development of dynamic loudspeakers. In contrast,
headphone technology appears to have undergone relatively
little development during this period.

The tutorial will conclude with a brief overview of the
loudspeaker manufacturing landscape of the era, noting that
only a small proportion of manufacturers survived the
transition to dynamic loudspeaker technology.
Speakers
JB

Juha Backman

Bang & Olufsen
Thursday May 28, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Aud 49 Technical University of Denmark Asmussens Alle, Building 303A DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby Denmark
  Audio Equipment, Tutorial

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