1. A specific vintage speaker is rare and finding in original condition is difficult.
2. The current speaker cones are stiffer than the older Pulsonic ones.
3. If you have an some older speaker that needs a recone, new cones sound completely different than original even after being broken in. Throwing away a blown speaker just is a waste.
4. It’s fun to learn about some of the tricks other speaker manufacturers are using to duplicate old unobtanium cones.
For 1, my more recent amp purchases were as much for the original speakers as much as the amps themselves.
And I appreciate the experiments on this topic, because even a well broken in new speaker or recone doesn’t really achieve the same tone as the old speaker. Some are closer than others.
Though even above and beyond optimized treatment or break-in of a speaker, there are just some speakers that can’t seem to be replicated these days, like the alnico CTS 10” as an example. I wish someone would work on cloning those. I think Weber used to have a speaker close to those, but the cones were no longer available so discontinued?
Me seeing a super reverb appear on the marketplace…
-then seeing the replacement modern speakers, or the “hodgepodge “ of random unoriginal speakers
Fixed quote, Willabe