> I just do not see how a voice coil can produce that with a single linear movement...
If a closed conductor moves in a magnetic field it makes a current.
And the other way: current in a closed conductor in a magnetic field wants to move.
The "linear" isn't at issue. The conductor doesn't really know the whole picture, rotary or linear.
Take the motor out of your car heater (many toy motors will work similar). Put DC on it, it spins. Spin it, you get DC. Yes, DC motors ARE generators, and will generate fine. (For "best" generator action you do some small mods.)
The speed of a motor is proportional to voltage.
The voltage of a generator is proportional to speed.
If there was no friction, air-drag, or copper loss, the motor/generator would be perfectly reversible. 12V in makes 1,200RPM. 1,200RPM makes 12V out.
In fact we always have losses. Say that 12V in only spun up to 1,100RPM. And that a 1,200RPM spin only made 11V.
Then if we spin-up with 12V to 1,100RPM, and then cut the voltage supply, and watch the generator output, we will get around 10V at the moment of cut-over (decreasing as RPM falls).
In rotary motors, coil mass is not a critical thing. It costs money and wants to fly off the armature, but we don't have to pinch grams. We want good efficiency and use enough copper to get near 90% efficient (10% loss). In a vibratory motor working very fast, mass hurts. We minimize the amount of copper, which means high copper resistance. Efficiency won't be as high as 30%, losses are huge. So instead of the maybe 80% we got from a rotary motor/generator we might get 40% (as in my example). And if we also want wide bandwidth (and damn the efficiency) we might get 10% or 5% as in HBP's plot.
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> magnet has to have a specific magnetic field in relation to the coil.
For "best" balance of efficiency, bandwidth, and cost, there's an "optimum" field strength.
However ANY field strength will cause SOME coil force, and presumably motion.
Is Weber's dingus really a magnet?
Is that spider really allowing the coil to move?
I dunno. Maybe it is just an odd resistor, perhaps using-up stray parts from a speaker builder.
If it truly moves, the motion *may* be invisible. You can make heaps of treble with 0.001" motion. Speakers (and speaker motors) move mostly with deep bass. Any good guitar speaker motor should move 0.050" (two matchbook covers) with heavy bass, and that's usually visible.