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Author
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Topic: Dry rot in speakers
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Frank Angel
Film God
Posts: 5305
From: Brooklyn NY USA
Registered: Dec 1999
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posted 11-15-2004 09:54 AM
I understand that reconing services are readily available and any speaker exhibiting that kind of damage should either be sent for service or replaced, hopefully BEFORE it turns to dust.
I have 8 15in woofers and 8 midrange speakers in 8 BSR 3-way systems where I see the foam surround beginning to deteriorate, yet the cones are fine -- impregnated paper on the woofers and a transparant plastic of some kind for the mids. I was thinking of trying to repair the surround foam myself, not so much for the cost of reconing, but rather more for the labor of having to physically extricate the speakers from the boxes.
The foam is just beginning to go and I thought if I got strips of rubber and just glued the strips over the foam with rubber cement, that might be a preventative and easy fix. I have no idea how that would affect the performance of the speaker, but I figure I could try -- if it works, I am ahead of the game; if it doesn't, I just will have to pull them and have them reconed.
I knew a reputable audio engineer (he worked in a big NYC recording studio) who said that with his any of his speakers that had paper cones, after 5 years he would paint the paper with rubber cement as a preservative. He claimed it did not affect the speaker response but that it actually improved the speakers damping. I have no way of knowing if that actually is true or not, but I figure if he can apply a coating of rubber cement to the entire cone, my applying just a bit around the edges couldn't hurt. In fact, the only reason I thought I would try rubber cement is because of this guy's tale. I actually first thought of using silicone cement as the bond for the rubber strips as silicone has great bonding power while remaining flexible after it dries. Although I don't think I'd be able to apply it as evenly as the thinner rubber cement which can be brushed on more uniformly.
Anyone know who might supply rubber sheets of various thicknesses? I was considering cutting up condoms as the joining material for want of anything more easily accessable. I figure they should be pretty tough and resilient, no? Then again there is the embarrassment of having to dump twenty-five 100 count cases of Trojans on the counter.
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