ARCHIVED FORUM -- March 2012 to February 2022READ ONLY FORUM
This is the second Archived Forum which was active between 1st March 2012 and 23rd February 2022
The speaker front is the first thing people sees when looking the first time at your vintage Beovox speakers if it looks bad they will think that it also sounds bad. So a 20 to 40 year old speaker deserves a new front.
Speaker cloth or fabric comes in several different types and colors and is advertised in different manners, but what I look for is a kind of open fabric, meaning you can look through it when very near to the eye, not so at 50 Cm distance, and it has a little stretch in it.
A close woven fabric will distort the sound, specially the bass driver needs to move some air and a closed fabric will inhibit that and furthermore dampen the other frequencies. Audiophile Fabric is like the Audiophile cable, Snake oil.
Before starting you will need the Fabric, tools and glue. Most important (of course the Fabric) is the glue, I use a good 3M spray glue, and at times Arleens Tacky glue, I have tried with double sided tape, but after a week or so the fabric started loosening again, so try it out, there are as many glue types out there as beer in southern Germany
The drink and he cigarets are only for relaxing in between, doing hard work as this turned out to be.
We have to get of the old fabric. I cut the front edges all around, and the just pull of the rest from the back side.
On these Beovox 3702 grills it came of easy, but if someone did a bad job before you, you may have to use a hobby knife to get all old glue and fabric of, clean the base properly before attaching the new fabric.
Now check the base/frame for damages or broken pieces, specially if there are broken pegs, repair these before attaching the new fabric, my frame turned out like this.
So I decided to make new ones, I found a piece of 1/4" plywood, and before starting cutting I had the good idea to check the old frames against the speaker, turned out that the holes for mid range and tweeter was of by some 3 Cm. I corrected that on the new frames. Marked the plywood after the old frames and corrected the holes for tweeter and mid range, cut the surrounding and thereafter the holes with an electric top handle oscillating jig saw, then I took out my router and routed the edge offset and the offsets for screws around the hole for the bass driver, here the front
And here the back
In my secret chamber I found a liquid that will protect wood against termites, woodworms, meal dew, wrinkles and bad breath for 200 years, I will try that on my face some day.
Left it to dry for a couple of days, and then got out all the tools and glues need for attaching the fabric, I placed a woolen blanket on our dining table (FS not at home) and over that the beautiful colored fabric, as the fabric had some wrinkles, I ironed it with an iron, never ever tell the FS that I can iron, I will have to do my oven shirts for the rest of our relationship.
I placed the frame over the fabric and cut, with the scissors, the fabric about 5 Cm bigger all around the frame. Then I took one frame to the garage and sprayed the front with 3M Super 77, left it for 5 min. and then placed it centered on the fabric, pressed it down and left 5 min. to dry.
More to come, I'm tired its 4 AM going to bed