syscokid
Ambassador of War & Peace
Earlier today as I was continuing my recent obsession of reworking the guts of my old JCM800 combo, I managed to severely damage one of the two Scumback speakers of the 2x12 combo cab.
Since the chassis, which is on my work table, is about 6 feet from the cab, I've been using a 10' extension speaker cable to connect each other. As I was repositioning the cab, the speaker cable got caught underneath another amp, and it was enough force to rip the speaker's leads between the terminal strip for the speaker cable and the speaker's cone completely off:

I immediately contacted Jim Seavall, owner of Scumback Speakers, and after considering roundtrip shipping and cost of repair which involves reconing, the whole repair bill would cost just a few dollars shy of a new Scumback speaker.
Besides the fact that I should have paid more attention to where the extension speaker cable was, there are at least two things I could have done differently to avoid the damage:
1: I could have installed a cable clamp to secure the speaker cable to the cabinet.
2: Eight years ago... I should have never soldered the speaker's terminal lugs to the female lugs of the speaker cable's wire ends...
An expensive lesson indeed...
Since the chassis, which is on my work table, is about 6 feet from the cab, I've been using a 10' extension speaker cable to connect each other. As I was repositioning the cab, the speaker cable got caught underneath another amp, and it was enough force to rip the speaker's leads between the terminal strip for the speaker cable and the speaker's cone completely off:

I immediately contacted Jim Seavall, owner of Scumback Speakers, and after considering roundtrip shipping and cost of repair which involves reconing, the whole repair bill would cost just a few dollars shy of a new Scumback speaker.
Besides the fact that I should have paid more attention to where the extension speaker cable was, there are at least two things I could have done differently to avoid the damage:
1: I could have installed a cable clamp to secure the speaker cable to the cabinet.
2: Eight years ago... I should have never soldered the speaker's terminal lugs to the female lugs of the speaker cable's wire ends...

An expensive lesson indeed...


! Well, here we go...


