# How Bose Prevents Noise-Canceling Headphones From Breaking During Loud Sounds

> A 1993 Bose patent describing a physical design for noise-canceling headphones that prevents the speaker diaphragm from collapsing or popping out of place during intense audio pressure.

- **Patent:** US 5181252
- **Original title:** High compliance headphone driving
- **Owner:** Bose Corp
- **Granted:** 1993
- **Status:** Public domain (expired)
- **Times cited:** 54
- **Field:** consumer_electronics, mechanical

## What it does

This patent describes a way to make noise-canceling headphones more durable when dealing with high-pressure sound waves. Because active noise reduction systems often use very flexible (high compliance) speaker diaphragms, these parts can easily be pushed too far, causing the voice coil to pop out of its magnetic gap or the diaphragm to get stuck in a collapsed state. The invention adds physical limiters, such as plastic elements or wire mesh screens, to stop the diaphragm from moving beyond a safe distance. It also includes specific shapes or indentations in the diaphragm material that act like a spring, ensuring the speaker snaps back to its original shape if it ever gets squashed.

## What it does NOT cover

- Does not cover the electronic noise-cancellation algorithms (the 'active' part of the system).
- Does not cover standard headphones that lack the high-compliance diaphragm design.
- Does not cover software-based limiters or digital signal processing (DSP) used to cap volume.
- Does not cover non-mechanical methods for preventing diaphragm damage.

## The clever bit

The invention treats the speaker diaphragm like a mechanical spring that needs physical 'bump stops' to prevent it from over-extending or permanently deforming under high pressure.

## Real-world examples

1. Bose QuietComfort series
2. Aviation headsets
3. High-end active noise-canceling headphones

## Why it matters

This patent was crucial for the early development of reliable active noise-canceling (ANC) headsets, which were originally designed for pilots. By solving the mechanical failure points of high-compliance drivers, Bose was able to commercialize the technology that eventually became the standard for modern travel and consumer audio.

## Frequently asked questions

### What does How Bose Prevents Noise-Canceling Headphones From Breaking During Loud Sounds cover?

A 1993 Bose patent describing a physical design for noise-canceling headphones that prevents the speaker diaphragm from collapsing or popping out of place during intense audio pressure.

### Who owns patent US 5181252?

Bose Corp owns this patent, granted in 1993.

### When does this patent expire?

This patent has expired and is now in the public domain — anyone can use the invention freely.

### What is patent US 5181252 cited by?

This patent has been cited by 54 later patents that build on its ideas.

### What problem does this patent solve?

This patent was crucial for the early development of reliable active noise-canceling (ANC) headsets, which were originally designed for pilots. By solving the mechanical failure points of high-compliance drivers, Bose was able to commercialize the technology that eventually became the standard for modern travel and consumer audio.

### What does this patent NOT cover?

Does not cover the electronic noise-cancellation algorithms (the 'active' part of the system).

**Full plain-English explainer:** https://patentbrief.org/patent/us/5181252/acoustic-noise-cancelling

**Original patent:** https://patents.google.com/patent/US5181252

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_Source: PatentBrief — https://patentbrief.org. Patent facts are from public records; the plain-English explanation is PatentBrief's._
