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Replacing speaker grille foam
I have an old pair of speakers whose foam grilles turned to dust.
Can they be replaced with any old thing? Or must I obtain special tempered virgin linear response low distortion acoustic audiophile expensive foam? And how difficult is this stuff to cut? Daniele |
Replacing speaker grille foam
In article
, D.M. Procida wrote: I have an old pair of speakers whose foam grilles turned to dust. Can they be replaced with any old thing? Or must I obtain special tempered virgin linear response low distortion acoustic audiophile expensive foam? And how difficult is this stuff to cut? Daniele Foam of any type is very difficult to cut neatly. Best way (if possible) would be to use a proper speaker fabric. You'll find it on Ebay, etc. -- *The beatings will continue until morale improves * Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Replacing speaker grille foam
In article 1nhj6rw.woj7e71rtk443N%real-not-anti-spam-address@apple-
juice.co.uk, says... I have an old pair of speakers whose foam grilles turned to dust. Can they be replaced with any old thing? Or must I obtain special tempered virgin linear response low distortion acoustic audiophile expensive foam? Open cell acoustically transparent foam will do it. Something like this https://goo.gl/zkk5ir And how difficult is this stuff to cut? Difficult? It's foam and mostly made of air, you may have to learn how to operate a pair of scissors or a craft knife. any small child should be able to show you how to do that. A bit of practice on a bathroom sponge and you should be good to go. Save yourself the hassle, cut one leg off a pair of tights and pull that over the speaker, could add to the aesthetics, fishnet speakers anyone? |
Replacing speaker grille foam
"Huge" wrote in message ... On 2017-12-24, D.M. Procida wrote: I have an old pair of speakers whose foam grilles turned to dust. Can they be replaced with any old thing? Or must I obtain special tempered virgin linear response low distortion acoustic audiophile expensive foam? I'd be inclined to use acoustically transparent foam. At the very least, you need open cell foam. And how difficult is this stuff to cut? Easy. Scissors or a very sharp knife (Stanley knife/scalpel). Wilmslow Audio sell it. It's no longer available in the size I need for my (now semi-retired) speakers, so I just took it off and threw it away. If you get the foam from Wilmslow Audio (who are in Hinckley or Nuneaton or somewhere like that although they started life in Wilmslow) get some Tygan grille material as well. You will probably have to take the existing material off to fit the foam, and Tygan shrinks under heating (hair dryer) to give you a nicely tensioned appearance. -- Woody harrogate3 at ntlworld dot com |
Replacing speaker grille foam
Woody wrote:
get the foam from Wilmslow Audio (who are in Hinckley or Nuneaton or somewhere like that ) Broughton Astley |
Replacing speaker grille foam
In article ,
Unsteadyken wrote: Difficult? It's foam and mostly made of air, you may have to learn how to operate a pair of scissors or a craft knife. any small child should be able to show you how to do that. A bit of practice on a bathroom sponge and you should be good to go. Interesting - this is to shape a piece of foam, or simply to trim it to size where the edges aren't seen? I'm told the usual way to get a perfect edge etc is to freeze it first, so it doesn't distort when cutting. But if a moulded shape like many foam speaker grills, even more difficult. -- *Suicidal twin kills sister by mistake. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Replacing speaker grille foam
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Replacing speaker grille foam
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , D.M. Procida wrote: I have an old pair of speakers whose foam grilles turned to dust. Can they be replaced with any old thing? Or must I obtain special tempered virgin linear response low distortion acoustic audiophile expensive foam? And how difficult is this stuff to cut? Foam of any type is very difficult to cut neatly. Best way (if possible) would be to use a proper speaker fabric. You'll find it on Ebay, etc. The foam rectangle would be inset into the surround of the speaker. As I recall, the original had square edges and nestled in reasonably securely. If I were to use speaker fabric, I'd also need to create a frame that I could fit into the surround. Foam sounds easier, if not as attractive. Daniele |
Replacing speaker grille foam
Woody wrote:
If you get the foam from Wilmslow Audio (who are in Hinckley or Nuneaton or somewhere like that although they started life in Wilmslow) get some Tygan grille material as well. You will probably have to take the existing material off to fit the foam, and Tygan shrinks under heating (hair dryer) to give you a nicely tensioned appearance. I don't follow why I'd need grille cloth as well as foam (originally, there was just the foam). They look like http://www.audiocostruzioni.com/r_s/diffusori/diffusori-5/royd-audio-conistor/constriction%20r.jpg. Daniele |
Replacing speaker grille foam
Huge wrote:
On 2017-12-24, D.M. Procida wrote: Woody wrote: If you get the foam from Wilmslow Audio (who are in Hinckley or Nuneaton or somewhere like that although they started life in Wilmslow) get some Tygan grille material as well. You will probably have to take the existing material off to fit the foam, and Tygan shrinks under heating (hair dryer) to give you a nicely tensioned appearance. I don't follow why I'd need grille cloth as well as foam (originally, there was just the foam). They look like http://www.audiocostruzioni.com/r_s/...royd-audio-con istor/constriction%20r.jpg. Why not just leave them like that? Well, they've been thus long enough... I think they'll look nicer with grilles. Daniele |
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