English: Animation showing the operation of a reflex loudspeaker. Drawing shows a cross section through the speaker. The reflex loudspeaker, also called a megaphone, bullhorn, or loudhailer, is a type of
folded horn speaker widely used in
public address systems. It consists of a specialized diaphragm loudspeaker called a
compression driver (a) attached to a metal horn
(d). The driver has a diaphragm
(blue) driven to vibrate by the audio signal current flowing through a coil of wire
(red) between the poles of a cylindrical magnet
(green). The horn serves to couple the diaphragm more efficiently to the air, allowing it to radiate more of its energy as sound than a conventional horn speaker, making it louder. The horn sound path must be several feet long, so to make the speaker more compact the sound path is "folded" into a zigzag shape by several concentric exponentially-widening ducts. The sound waves pass forward through an inner tube
(b) in the central projection in the horn, back through a larger concentric tube
(c), then out through the surrounding horn
(d).
In this animation the rate of vibration of the diaphragm and the speed of the sound waves are shown greatly reduced. The logo in the lower right corner is not a part of the diagram and was added by the gif animation software.