Summit floorstanding loudspeaker Manuel D’Utilisation

Page de 28
26     Glossary of Audio Terms
AC. Abbreviation for alternating current. 
Active crossover. Uses active devices (transistors, IC’s, 
tubes) and some form of power supply to operate. 
Amplitude. The extreme range of a signal. Usually measured 
from the average to the extreme.
 
Arc. The visible sparks generated by an electrical discharge. 
 
Bass. The lowest frequencies of sound. 
 
Bi-Amplification. Uses an electronic crossover, or line-
level passive crossover, and separate power amplifiers for 
the high and low frequency loudspeaker drivers. 
Capacitance. That property of a capacitor which determines 
how much charge can be stored in it for a given potential 
difference between its terminals, measured in farads, by 
the ratio of the charge stored to the potential difference.
Capacitor. A device consisting of two or more conducting 
plates separated from one another by an insulating material 
and used for storing an electrical charge. Sometimes called 
a condenser.
 
Clipping. Distortion of a signal by its being chopped off. An 
overload problem caused by pushing an amplifier beyond 
its capabilities. The flat-topped signal has high levels of har-
monic distortion which creates heat in a loudspeaker and 
is the major cause of loudspeaker component failure. 
CLS. The abbreviation for curvilinear linesource.
 
Crossover. An electrical circuit that divides a full band-
width  signal into the desired frequency bands for the 
loudspeaker components. 
 
dB (decibel). A numerical expression of the relative loud-
ness of a sound. The difference in decibels between two 
sounds is ten times the Base 10 logarithm of the ratio of 
their power levels.
DC. Abbreviation for direct current. 
Diffraction. The breaking up of a sound wave caused by 
some type of mechanical interference such as a cabinet 
edge, grill frame or other similar object. 
 
Diaphragm. A thin flexible membrane or cone that vibrates 
in response to electrical signals to produce sound waves. 
 
Distortion. Usually referred to in terms of total harmonic 
distortion (THD) which is the percentage of unwanted 
harmonics of the drive signal present with the wanted signal. 
Generally used to mean any unwanted change introduced 
by the device under question. 
 
Driver. See transducer. 
 
Dynamic Range. The range between the quietest and the 
loudest sounds a device can handle (often quoted in dB). 
 
Efficiency. The acoustic power delivered for a given elec-
trical input. Often expressed as decibels/watt/meter 
(dB/w/m). 
 
ESL. The abbreviation for electrostatic loudspeaker. 
 
Headroom. The difference, in decibels, between the peak 
and RMS levels in program material. 
 
Hybrid. A product created by the marriage of two different 
technologies. Meant here as the combination of a dynamic 
woofer with an electrostatic transducer. 
 
Hz (Hertz). Unit of frequency equivalent to the number of 
cycles per second. 
 
Imaging. To make a representation or imitation of the original
sonic event.
Impedance. The total opposition offered by an electric 
circuit to the flow of an alternating current of a single fre-
quency. It is a combination of resistance and reactance and 
is measured in ohms. Remember that a speaker’s imped-
ance changes with frequency, it is not a constant value.
G
LOSSARY
 
OF
 A
UDIO
 T
ERMS