A couple years ago I came across a 2x12 Avatar cab for sale for $80. I had no need for it but at that price... The cab had a pair of 12" alnico speakers in it. A quick search showed they were Heppners pulled from an old Hammond. Reviews were mixed. More guessing than anything. They sat for about a year or so until I finally got around to hooking the cab up to my Deluxe and I really liked them but the bottom end was lacking. I finally decided that they'd be the perfect opportunity to try my hand at reconing. They were never going to leave my house as they were anyway. So I ordered the parts from Weber. $12 total for each speaker. There are no kits for Heppner so it was mix and match and mostly driven by the voice coil size. The Heppners had 1.5" aluminum, 16 ohm voice coils. I replaced them with 1.5", 8 ohm Nomex (25 watt). This was a surprise to me. Everything I read said not to use these speaker at more than 5-10 watts. I was unable to blow them when I tried just before the recone. The bass sounded worse at high volume but that was cone related. When tried to cut out the cones and the surrounds just basically crumbled even with a new razor.
The voice coil size gave me no real choice of cone. It was a C12N cone which I thought may be too heavy. The spider size was an exact match. The shortest voice coil height was about 1/8" taller than the original so there is a bit more coming through the front of the cone. The C12N cone turned out to be a bit lighter and thinner than the originals. I did the recones earlier this week and gave them a go yesterday. I was amazed how good they sound. The bottom end is PERFECT. That amp was too boomy with the C12N I had in there. No harshness, no brittleness. Just warm alnico/tweed tone. $24 for 2 speakers plus shipping and an hour or 2 of work, mostly removing old glue. Definitely worth several times the effort and cost. The biggest PITA in the whole process I thought was soldering the tinsel and VC leads together. I thought I was doing a terrible job but when I looked at some of my professionally done speakers they looked the same. Just hidden by black glue.
The voice coil size gave me no real choice of cone. It was a C12N cone which I thought may be too heavy. The spider size was an exact match. The shortest voice coil height was about 1/8" taller than the original so there is a bit more coming through the front of the cone. The C12N cone turned out to be a bit lighter and thinner than the originals. I did the recones earlier this week and gave them a go yesterday. I was amazed how good they sound. The bottom end is PERFECT. That amp was too boomy with the C12N I had in there. No harshness, no brittleness. Just warm alnico/tweed tone. $24 for 2 speakers plus shipping and an hour or 2 of work, mostly removing old glue. Definitely worth several times the effort and cost. The biggest PITA in the whole process I thought was soldering the tinsel and VC leads together. I thought I was doing a terrible job but when I looked at some of my professionally done speakers they looked the same. Just hidden by black glue.
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