I've found a bunch of threads, here and elsewhere, about what to use for doping the surround on a DIY recone. PVA (white) glue, rubber cement, contact cement, vinyl dissolved in toluene, various dilutions of the above... It's starting to drive me nuts.
Mr. Fahey has been a huge help with his posts over the years, but there have been some contradictory posts about the acceptability of PVA.
What I've been able to piece together is that you want an elastic compound (butyl rubber in the case of cloth surrounds) in a solvent base selected to penetrate the paper well, carry the solute load into the paper, and have a decent working time.
I'm experimenting with DIY reconing using a pair of Utah C12N-like drivers with rotted cones. Apart from using a spider that's too tall, it's been going OK so far. Nowhere near the quality of a new speaker, but turning junk into something useable for $20 isn't bad.
I was planning on using a thinned PVA - my wife has a bottle of Mod Podge, and it dries to an elastic film. But then I started doing more research and started looking into various rubber-based adhesives, when I found this stuff called Tear Repair, and it appears to just be a thin latex solution in water & ammonia.
Without additional dilution, most of the solid stays on the surface of the cone (practicing on a rotted one), though some does appear to penetrate. The dried latex rubber can be peeled off.
Diluting with water seems to not yield much improvement; I'll try diluting with water and ammonia. I'm a little worried that this might just be a waste of time as I don't think subsequent coats will dissolve a dried one.
In any event, does anyone have a suggestion for what I should do here? Give up on latex rubber and go with something in an organic base? Use thinned PVA and stop over-thinking this?
Mr. Fahey has been a huge help with his posts over the years, but there have been some contradictory posts about the acceptability of PVA.
What I've been able to piece together is that you want an elastic compound (butyl rubber in the case of cloth surrounds) in a solvent base selected to penetrate the paper well, carry the solute load into the paper, and have a decent working time.
I'm experimenting with DIY reconing using a pair of Utah C12N-like drivers with rotted cones. Apart from using a spider that's too tall, it's been going OK so far. Nowhere near the quality of a new speaker, but turning junk into something useable for $20 isn't bad.
I was planning on using a thinned PVA - my wife has a bottle of Mod Podge, and it dries to an elastic film. But then I started doing more research and started looking into various rubber-based adhesives, when I found this stuff called Tear Repair, and it appears to just be a thin latex solution in water & ammonia.
Without additional dilution, most of the solid stays on the surface of the cone (practicing on a rotted one), though some does appear to penetrate. The dried latex rubber can be peeled off.
Diluting with water seems to not yield much improvement; I'll try diluting with water and ammonia. I'm a little worried that this might just be a waste of time as I don't think subsequent coats will dissolve a dried one.
In any event, does anyone have a suggestion for what I should do here? Give up on latex rubber and go with something in an organic base? Use thinned PVA and stop over-thinking this?
Comment