Originally posted by Chuck H
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The standard textbook of electricity is used by everybody from bench techs to lineman, to nuke plant workers.
It has all the formulas, and all the terms, and all the theory, and starts with the simplest most basic explanations...
ALL AC electricity originates with a magnet and a coil of wire, just like the construction of a speaker. This book will take you into the most fundamental principles of AC generation, and you can break it down step by step.
For $10, you can find the answer or formula for almost anything.
Also, appropriately, the book gives credit to Tesla, not Edison, for conceiving our modern electrical grid system and three phase power...
(it's about damn time)
So, I guess the answer to the question is YES, if the speaker moves in and out at a regular rate, you could actually measure a sine wave at the terminals of the voice coil. so in a way, you could call the speaker a microphone or a transducer, if you have the external acoustic force to move the cone...
The coil of wire, moving in the magnetic field, produces a detectable amount of current...and if the coil is moving at a regular repetitive rate, you can for sure measure a sine wave across the coil.
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