Do speakers take time to warm up?


For example, if my stereo is on and has been on for weeks, and then I connect speakers that have been sitting idle for a few weeks, do the speakers sound better after an hour of being played?  Whats going on?  Is it the caps in the crossover, the drivers, the ferrofluid in the tweeters?  All of the above?
b_limo

Showing 2 responses by phusis

@b_limo --

Same-ish thing happened to me when I picked up my horn speakers in Brighton, UK back in 2015, and drove them all the way to Denmark in a van - in December (in Northern Europe, where it gets cold in the winter time). Arriving early on the day some hours went by assembling horn sections and cross-overs, and finally by the end of the day when I hooked them up (they'd been broken-in some 2 weeks by their maker after being build), having now gone through some period of acclimatization, they sounded anything but broken-in, but rather thin, "high-strung" and outright dull. I then let some music play through them at a bit more than moderate levels for a couple of hours, and when I came back it was night and day; now they sounded fully relaxed, open and naturally warm. What accounted for this radical change in sonic presentation, I can't say, but several factors might have been involved - the most important of which could've been the whole temperature shift and for all parts, including the horns and overall enclosure, to settle in. 

Interestingly, I also find speakers to usually sound better when they've been given a good workout for a period of time, and I mean speakers that have sat in your system for years even and are fully broken-in. I assume it's not the electronics - although there are gains to be had here as well when they've been turned on for hours, or days - because the presentation doesn't apply to this phenomena with only moderate to low SPL's. If we assume speakers generally respond positively to being played at elevated levels for some time (not to the point of excessively heating up the voice coils and x-over part where heat becomes a negative factor), then what's to account for this change? I don't know. Something tells me it's the drive units and not the passive cross-over parts, but I've very recently acquired new (used) cinema speakers that are fully actively driven, and if they respond the same way (haven't found out yet) I take it that rules out the XO. 

@douglas_schroeder --


Now, anyone who disagrees, how about you show me/us the measurements that demonstrate the purported audible change that occurs when speakers "warm up"? Surely this has been proven time and again, right? We should have hundreds of sets of such measurements, right? This should be well documented, right? I suspect not, because it would have been very easy for you to provide such contrasting measurements were they available.


"Were they available" being the prerogative phrase here. Your claim rests on the premise believing sonic variations during warm-up (less than, and somewhat distinctive from break-in) should be measurable in the first place, something at least I largely disagree with. From my chair you’re hiding behind this unwavering position seeing it rarely if ever being met, but not necessarily for the reason you’d think; what is or is not proven or quantifiable as facts are both a condition of perceiving sound, and in this case hard evidence where called for is likely absent simply because what needs to be measured isn’t identified.


Maybe I am wrong. Maybe there are lots of sets of measurements out there proving that speakers change sound significantly during break in and warm up. Show them to me.

Ibid.