The speakers in the pbp could use, well, a subwoofer maybe. I don't know where you'd put one. To look at the picture they look like ordinary small speakers like you might find in a radio. Recent advances like neodymium magnets have made big sound from a small space possible, but they're best used in some environment designed for them, not just stuck in there. Some plastic or fiberglass housing, I remember it's important that sound waves coming off the front of the speaker not reach the back and cause interference and partial cancellation. A cardboard box is better than nothing with bigger speakers. There is software like qspeakers for trying to optimize designs, not that I've tried it.
What about cell phone speakers? They aren't very big but some can belt out those ringtones, which are often music clips. Seems like there must be some surplus ones around since there are millions of cell phones.
(01-18-2020, 07:17 PM)ab1jx Wrote: The speakers in the pbp could use, well, a subwoofer maybe. I don't know where you'd put one. To look at the picture they look like ordinary small speakers like you might find in a radio. Recent advances like neodymium magnets have made big sound from a small space possible, but they're best used in some environment designed for them, not just stuck in there. Some plastic or fiberglass housing, I remember it's important that sound waves coming off the front of the speaker not reach the back and cause interference and partial cancellation. A cardboard box is better than nothing with bigger speakers. There is software like qspeakers for trying to optimize designs, not that I've tried it.
What about cell phone speakers? They aren't very big but some can belt out those ringtones, which are often music clips. Seems like there must be some surplus ones around since there are millions of cell phones.
Sticking six cellphone speakers under here sounds like a great possibility!
— Jeremiah Cornelius
"Be the first person not to do something, that no one has thought of not doing before’’
— Brian Eno, "Oblique Strategies"
I'm thinking to grab a couple of LG G7 speakers and give the mod a go. The housing will be an issue but one step at a time
Device: Pinebook Pro 128GB No:246 / MainOS: Manjaro ARM
Godot and Flutter - creating something can be fun with the right tools!
We need to get the specifications of the speakers put in the Wiki. I've added that they are oval in design. But actual measurements would be nice.
Here is a link for the technical information;
Wiki - Pinebook Pro - Audio
As usual, feel free to correct, improve or comment, (good or politely bad).
We still need;
- Size: length, width & height
- Wattage of the existing model
- Ohms of the existing model
Ideally we would have a picture of the dynamic range, showing where we get roll-off at the low and high ends.
--
Arwen Evenstar
Princess of Rivendale
I have experimented with various distros on the PB Pro. What I have noticed is that the sound coming from the PB Pro when running the stock Debian 9 image is far better than when running any other distro. The other distros seem to have very low volume. Has anyone else noticed this?
In Manjaro (Applications > Settings > System Settings > Audio) you can boost above 100%.
Don't boost to the max, as it will quickly distort the sound.