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Speaker Types: Floorstanding, Bookshelf, Bipolar, Dipolar, Subwoofer


Speakers come in all shapes and sizes. As part of our Fluance Ultimate Guide to Home Theater Setup , we walk you through the different styles of speakers available.

Floorstanding
  • Sit directly on the floor without a separate stand.
  • Often called tower speakers because the enclosures are typically tall and narrow.
  • Usually contain multiple drivers such as dedicated woofers, tweeters, and midrange drivers.
  • Large enclosure usually allows them to produce more bass than other speakers.

Bookshelf
  • Almost always has a smaller enclosure than a floor-standing speaker.
  • Usually contain a woofer and a tweeter, although some models may also include a midrange driver.
  • The smaller enclosure of bookshelf speakers limits their bass output.
  • Can also be used as a surround sound speaker.

Bipole/Dipole
  • Drivers are arranged in pairs facing different directions.
  • In some cases, there is a front-facing woofer and two tweeters aiming in different directions. 
  • In bipolar speakers, the tweeter is most important, because the sounds that you want to be directional, come from the tweeter. 
  • In this configuration, the listener hears almost no sound directly from the speaker, only sound reflected from the walls, ceiling and floor, which makes the sound more spacious.
  • Dipole speakers fire their drivers out of phase, whereas bipole speakers are in phase. 
  • Bipole and dipole speakers are often mounted directly to a wall.

Subwoofer
  • Reproduces very low frequencies that are below what a typical woofer can handle.
  • Most have just a single driver in an enclosure.
  • The long wavelengths of the deep bass tone produced by the subwoofer emanate equally in all directions, so the driver doesn’t need to face the listener.