I want to count and log the BPM of a rather large bass speaker (250-400W RMS range i assume).

BUT there is a mostly wooden/stone wall (~40cm) between me and the speaker + a 50cm air gap.

I managed to detect the speaker with a normal microphone, but that gets confused once there are other noises like talking or foot steps in the room.

So my idea was to build a large coil around some graphite rod to build a sensor for electromagnetism. Then connect that to a audio amp and feed the result into a audio card microphone input.

Would that maybe work? Any guesses how far the magnetic field of a bass speaker is detectable? How much wire should i use for the coil?

Edit:

So i found this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83edokt3K5c of someone using a giant coil to pick up a very small speaker from a few feet away, so i assume its 100% possible, and the speaker i am trying to pick up has like 200-300x the power of what he is picking up in the video.

  • Alexander@sopuli.xyz
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    2 months ago

    Ok, I’ve done experiment myself; it was a dumb idea. Sure I can see the bass beat on smarthone hall sensor as sharp periodic spikes… from few cm away of the coil.

    Thing is, any measurable signal outside of coupled system is essentially power loss, which industrial made speakers are, obviously, optimized against. The field loops back into the magnetic drive through the shortest achievable path. Then, it’s not your typical radiative EM system, it’s low frequency near field transmission - field drops exponentially as you move away from the coil.

    Most probably, you’d need to measure long periodic signal, do lots of oversampling, etc. to gen anything. Or build a high fidelity resonator to steal the field from the speaker - essentially, same thing, except the resonator will probably start singing, too.

    So I’d give up on magnetic approach; why go for counteroptimized signal when you have optimized acoustic field? Just analyze it - look for sustained harmonic vibrations, fat envelopes so different from human voice barking and foorsteps; EDM are full of those nice sounds.