4 Pi - any "doping" suggestions to make the JBL look nicer? [message #95675] |
Sun, 12 June 2022 18:55 |
repeatafterme
Messages: 5 Registered: February 2022
|
Esquire |
|
|
Hi,
I just finished a pair of 4 Pi's. Thanks, Wayne. They sound great.
I bought a used pair of the JBLs and, while they sound good, they look terrible. Kind of a rat-like color that does not impress SWMBO. I'm looking for suggestions to make them look darker and less rat-like. I've heard one guy suggests using MinWax wood hardener for this purpose, and to make them last longer. I've also seen people who have used hair spray, diluted varnish, contact cement, all sorts of stuff.
Any ideas appreciated.
Alan
|
|
|
|
Re: 4 Pi - any "doping" suggestions to make the JBL look nicer? [message #95679 is a reply to message #95677] |
Mon, 13 June 2022 10:45 |
|
Wayne Parham
Messages: 18786 Registered: January 2001
|
Illuminati (33rd Degree) |
|
|
Yeah, Barry's right, I'm concerned about treatments on the cone. These 15-inchers used as midrange need very specific cone damping and the shape of the cone, ribs and the material used all play a big part in its behavior above 600Hz or so.
What I've seen in genuine JBL cones is they are uniformly gray with a slightly darker voice coil dust cap. They keep that shade of gray indefinitely when used indoors. But when they are exposed to sunlight, they tend to lighten and sometimes not uniformly. Not sure what causes the non-uniformity - whether it be from intermittent partial shading, from changing humidity or just that the pigment shading doesn't fade uniformly. I don't know what does it, but I've seen it happen - pretty regularly - on speakers used for prosound applications where they travel.
Sadly, the only thing I can really recommend is a recone. It costs a couple hundred bucks to recone a 2226H with genuine JBL cones. That's a lot to pay for aesthetics, but it does have the additional benefit of ensuring the speakers are 100% good as new. But really, your speakers appear to be uniformly gray so I'm not sure that's even going to satisfy. I think you just would prefer a darker cone. And that's not how JBL speakers look - they're gray.
So I think probably the grille solution Barry suggested might make the most sense. Certainly the pocketbook likes it better.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|