JBL Technical Note - Vol.3, No.3 电路原理图.pdf
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1、1 Technical Notes Volume 3, Number 3: JBL Professional Studio Monitors for Multichannel Sound Applications 1. Introduction: Mixing for multichannel sound has become a very important aspect of audio postproduction. There are three driving forces:Video DVD, Audio DVD, and advanced digital TV.The intro
2、duction of the video DVD in 1996 has opened up many opportunities in smaller work environments, such as those normally used in video post activities. It is here where most of the films with multichannel digital soundtracks are being transferred into the DVD Video format. Later in 1998, specification
3、s for the Audio DVD will be formalized, and that will open up another avenue for multichannel remix activities, both in the video post environment as well as in the traditional music recording environ- ment.The prospect of digital TV, which will require a new terrestrial broadcasting infrastruc- tur
4、e, will probably not get underway until the start of 2000. Just as JBL Professional helped “write the book” for exhibition and dubbing theater loud- speaker technology, we propose now to do the same thing for Video and Audio DVD production for multichannel sound presentation. In this Technical Note,
5、 we will present a history of multi- channel sound, leading up to current cinema for- mats.We will then examine the means that have been put forth for translating the cinema experi- ence into the home environment, emphasizing JBLs important role in this area. We will then cover listening and acousti
6、cal aspects of small to midsize production environ- ments, underscoring the desired loudspeaker performance attributes and JBLs solutions, with recommendations for JBL Professional loud- speakers for various size installations.We will then discuss future directions in multichannel sound as they appl
7、y to the computer work envi- ronment. Finally, we will present a complete glos- sary of terms pertinent to multi-channel sound. 2. A Short History of Multichannel Sound: The earliest studies in multichannel sound were carried out by Bell Telephone Laboratories during the early 1930s, when three-chan
8、nel transmissions were made over long telephone lines connecting the Academy of Music in Philadelphia and Constitution Hall in Washington D. C. Much new technical ground was broken in these experiments, and the HF drivers used in JBL Professionals cinema products are in fact direct lineal descendant
9、s of those used in the Bell Labs experiments. The first public demonstrations of multichannel sound were mounted by the Disney company for the soundtrack that accompanied “Fantasia,” in 1939.This was of course a road show, and when its run was over, the sound developments that supported it were reti
10、red. A later road show, “Cinerama,” was introduced in the early 1950s, and shortly thereafter the Cinemascope process was developed, along with a number of other anamorphic scoped 35-mm film formats for wide- screen presentation. Later, the 70-mm format was introduced, supporting six magnetic channe
11、ls on film, with five channels placed behind the screen along with a single surround channel (see Figure 1). By the mid-fifties, the high fidelity industry had introduced two-channel stereo, and by 1957 the stereo disc was introduced. FM stereo was stan- dardized in 1961, and the public was well on
12、its way to an appreciation of spatial sound reproduc- tion in the home as well as in the cinema. 2 make a presence in film sound. First was Optical Radiation Corporation (ORC) with their Cinema Digital Sound. Like many who are first to explore new technology, ORC paid the price with a num- ber of co
13、stly engineering and marketing mistakes. They have been succeeded in recent years by Dolby (SR-D), Digital Theater Sound (DTS), and Sony Dynamic Digital Sound (SDDS), the major players of today in cinema digital sound. While cinema installations worldwide number in the tens of thousands of screens,
14、a far greater number of multichannel sound systems are to be found in the homes of consumers around the world who have invested in the so-called Home Theater market.This audience, which numbers in the millions of installations, is the target of todays international DVD initiative. 3. A Close Look at
15、 Todays Multichannel Formats: Throughout the 1980s, Dolby Pro-Logic stereo was the mainstay of cinema surround sound. Figure 2 shows the basic working principles. Essentially, dialog is recorded as an in-polarity signal in both left and right channels.When this signal is detected, even momentarily,
16、the matrix playback (demixing) coefficients are altered to favor the center playback channel. As a rule, dia- log information and on-screen effects are treated in this fashion. Off-screen effects are recorded as anti-polarity signals; when this signal is detected the demixing coefficients favor the
17、surround sig- nal output, which is then fed to multiple loud- speakers placed on the side and rear walls of the theater. In order to enhance separation of the sur- round channel from the screen channels, the sur- round signal is delayed by up to 20 milliseconds in the rear of the house. Surprisingly
18、, there was little development in multichannel sound during the 1960s. But in the early 1970s, Dolby Laboratories, who had half a decade earlier made fundamental improvements in recording technology via their code-decode noise reduction system, turned their attentions to the problems of film sound,
19、and a new round of development was underway. By standardizing loudspeaker playback equalization and levels in both the creative environment and the public exhibition environment, a new standard of film sound presentation rapidly evolved. By the early 1980s, Dolby paved the way for significant econom
20、ies in film production. Over the years, the costs of magnetic striped film had escalated to the point where 35- and 70-mm prints had become nearly prohibitive. Dolbys introduction of “Dolby Stereo” prints, a purely opti- cal process, presented a stereo pair of tracks in which left, center, right, an
21、d surround program was encoded via a sum/difference phase matrix. The matrix approach (based on the unsuc- cessful consumer “quadraphonic” movement of the early 1970s) provided limited channel sepa- ration in playback, but it was soon found that film sound mixers, if they monitored through the encod
22、e/decode portions of the matrix, could pro- duce some quite convincing effects.The cost sav- ings alone mandated that the film industry go ahead with the process, and eventually a vast “Home Theater” industry grew up around Laserdiscs and VHS tapes with their sound tracks encoded with Dolby Stereo.
23、By the early 1980s, digital was beginning to Figure 1.A summary of film formats for surround sound: 35-mm 4-track mag (a), 70-mm 6-track mag (b); Dolby Digital, with SR analog and AC-3 (c); DTS timecode track for maintaining sync with external CD-ROM (d); Sony SDDS (e). Figure 2.Details of Pro-Logic
24、. Encoding (a); decoding (b) 3 The digital formats combine the foregoing pre- sentation layout with discrete digital tracks, while providing a stereo pair for the surround channels. Basically, all three current digital film formats can be treated the same as regards signal integrity. They all work o
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