Jump to content
IGNORED

Kinda sorta periphally audio related, but really freakin cool...


Recommended Posts

No, no :) I checked it with interest also. I guess we should express it more ! :)

 

I am always surprised how inventive people can turn something into a peace of art :)

 

Thanks for sharing it !

 

I am glad someone here has the genius, like me, to realize when something is really freakin cool...

 

:D

No electron left behind.

Link to comment

Pretty cool!. We did a similiar thing with a cone lying face up with a layer of graphite and ran sine waves through of different frequency. Didn't film it but the two most interesting patterns developed at the drivers resonant freq and the enclosures calculated tuning frequency. Very messy as well.

Link to comment

At first I thought it was the sound that was affecting the water, but on closer observation, it is clear that the hose is physically being moved by the paper cone of the woofer. As WGScott observed, with a 24 frame/second video camera and 23, 24 and 25 Hz cone movement, the result is actually fairly obvious.

 

Now, if you could make water dance that way with just sound waves....

Synology NAS>i7-6700/32GB/NVIDIA QUADRO P4000 Win10>Qobuz+Tidal>Roon>HQPlayer>DSD512> Fiber Switch>Ultrarendu (NAA)>Holo Audio May KTE DAC> Bryston SP3 pre>Levinson No. 432 amps>Magnepan (MG20.1x2, CCR and MMC2x6)

Link to comment

Wow, Doc!! That's the most amazing, exciting thing I have ever seen in all my many years on this planet!! Ever! (!!!!)

 

No, - really thanks for pointing us to it. I like how the smaller droplets appear the just hang in the air.

Link to comment
Wow, Doc!! That's the most amazing, exciting thing I have ever seen in all my many years on this planet!! Ever! (!!!!)

 

No, - really thanks for pointing us to it. I like how the smaller droplets appear the just hang in the air.

 

Haha, wow you really liked it! ;-)

No electron left behind.

Link to comment
At first I thought it was the sound that was affecting the water, but on closer observation, it is clear that the hose is physically being moved by the paper cone of the woofer. As WGScott observed, with a 24 frame/second video camera and 23, 24 and 25 Hz cone movement, the result is actually fairly obvious.

 

Now, if you could make water dance that way with just sound waves....

 

I agree it would be cooler if the effect was caused by the sound/pressure waves. It is still cool though.

No electron left behind.

Link to comment
At first I thought it was the sound that was affecting the water, but on closer observation, it is clear that the hose is physically being moved by the paper cone of the woofer. As WGScott observed, with a 24 frame/second video camera and 23, 24 and 25 Hz cone movement, the result is actually fairly obvious.

 

Now, if you could make water dance that way with just sound waves....

Maybe it would be possible with a locomotive set of horns, but I doubt the neighbors will share the appreciation after a while ;)

Alain

Link to comment

Yeah, but what's moving the *hose*? ;)

 

At first I thought it was the sound that was affecting the water, but on closer observation, it is clear that the hose is physically being moved by the paper cone of the woofer. As WGScott observed, with a 24 frame/second video camera and 23, 24 and 25 Hz cone movement, the result is actually fairly obvious.

 

Now, if you could make water dance that way with just sound waves....

Anyone who considers protocol unimportant has never dealt with a cat DAC.

Robert A. Heinlein

Link to comment

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now



×
×
  • Create New...