I Damaged My Speaker... I Fixed My Speaker... (PIC HEAVY!!!!)

syscokid

Ambassador of War & Peace
Country flag
I was very fortunate to be able to fix my damaged $170 Scumback speaker for about $23. So how did I damage it? Well, while I had the amp chassis on the operating table, the speakers in the combo cab were still connected to the amp with a 10' extension speaker cable. As I was moving the cab, the extension cable got stuck underneath another amp, and proceeded to rip off the speaker's wire terminals completely off the frame and speaker's lead wires completely off the voice coil. The proper and professional method to fix this damaged speaker is to recone it. Proper recone kits that will work for this speaker are about $50 to $90. Reconing by a pro is about $80 to $110 plus the cost of shipping if needed. But I decided to first try to repair the speaker without a full reconing job.

Injured speaker:
IMG_2223.JPG


With a hot air gun, I heated up the perimeter of the dust cap till the adhesive got a little soft and used an exacto knife to separate the dust cap from the cone:
IMG_2238.JPG


Instead of heating up the adhesive that is hiding the two voice coil wires, I decided to use acetone to soften up the glue and carefully pry up the wires. Not much to work with, and those voice coil wires sure are tiny:
IMG_2241.JPG


The new and crusty old parts:
IMG_2298.JPG


Tack on a bit of solder on the new speaker leads:
IMG_2302.JPG


The plan is to tack on to the tiny bit of solder, the leading edge of the voice coil wire close to the end of the speaker lead wire. Then roll the speaker lead as the voice coil wire wraps itself around the speaker lead wire:
IMG_2300.JPG


I was able to get about three complete revolutions of the voice coil wire to wrap around the speaker lead wire. At this point, I soldered the rest of the wrap-around voice coil wire to the speaker lead wire. The acetone discolored the cone:
IMG_2301.JPG


IMG_2306.JPG


With both speaker leads soldered to the voice coil leads, I tested and made sure the speaker is working at this point of the repair job:
IMG_2304.JPG

TO BE CONTINUED...
 
New wire terminal installed. I trimmed down the backing of the new terminal and punched a new mounting hole though it:
IMG_2308.JPG


Soldered the new speaker lead wires first, then trimmed off the excess for a cleaner look:
IMG_2318.JPG


The Black Speaker Glue not only secures the voice coil wires and speaker lead wires to the cone, it also makes some of that ugliness disappear:
IMG_2309.JPG


I applied a bead of the black glue to underneath the lip of the new dust cap. The yellow painter's tape is a trick that I got from watching one of Uncle Doug's video on reconing speakers. This makes positioning and centering the dust cap onto the cone a lot easier:
IMG_2314.JPG


The round metal base that holds the bristle pad to clean the soldering tip is going to come in handy:
IMG_2316.JPG


See what I mean?
IMG_2317.JPG


Looking much better now:
IMG_2322.JPG


And good as new:
IMG_2323.JPG


I installed this speaker into my 1x12 cab. Gave it a robust test for about a half an hour, an life is all good again! Syscokid is a happy camper... :woohoo:
 
Awesome!!!! I’m happy for your victory!
I have to ask a silly question, and it’s only because I’m curious...
Did you verify the polarity of the new terminals?
 
Excellent job and great tutorial.
That took patience, steady hands and some good eyesight.
It is as good as new, and now it has a story.
Instant MOJO!!!
 
oh ..................speaker --- thought you said sphincter...............................
 
In the category of “Things You’ve Tried Because Nobody Told You It Wouldn‘t Work,” I once fixed a torn speaker cone by gluing a patch that I cut from a coffee filter over the tear.

I eventually replaced the speaker, but the patch worked.
 
New wire terminal installed. I trimmed down the backing of the new terminal and punched a new mounting hole though it:
View attachment 44347


Soldered the new speaker lead wires first, then trimmed off the excess for a cleaner look:
View attachment 44352


The Black Speaker Glue not only secures the voice coil wires and speaker lead wires to the cone, it also makes some of that ugliness disappear:
View attachment 44348


I applied a bead of the black glue to underneath the lip of the new dust cap. The yellow painter's tape is a trick that I got from watching one of Uncle Doug's video on reconing speakers. This makes positioning and centering the dust cap onto the cone a lot easier:
View attachment 44349


The round metal base that holds the bristle pad to clean the soldering tip is going to come in handy:
View attachment 44350


See what I mean?
View attachment 44351


Looking much better now:
View attachment 44353


And good as new:
View attachment 44354


I installed this speaker into my 1x12 cab. Gave it a robust test for about a half an hour, an life is all good again! Syscokid is a happy camper... :woohoo:

Wow dude, that was fancy.
 
Back
Top