This is my first time posting to this forum so please point out any posting missteps.
I recently installed a used EVM-12s into a Randall RMS-150 combo amp (It's a 120watt solid state amp with a vented cab) and though the speaker sounds great in the amp I noticed that there is quite a lot of extraneous cone movement. It looks like every time I play a note (even the highest note on the guitar) the speaker will move like I'm putting a 2hz sign wave into it at 300 watts and most of the movement happens as the note is dying out and not during the initial attack. I can't really hear anything strange happening when it does this. The movement is almost slow enough to count the cycles and appears to be full cycle with complete in and out movement. I understand a little about speaker efficiency and why the EVM would be capable of more extreme excursion but I don't understand what could be causing it in this instance. Another detail is that I have two of the exact same amps so I checked whether the other amp caused the same movement, and it does, but only with the one speaker. This doesn't happen with any of the other three speakers I played the amp through. Just the EVM. The other speakers were a 200w celestion bass 12", JBL G125, and a Fender 100w.
I tried searching around for different speaker symptoms but was unable to come across anything similar relating to speaker failures, but there might be a term that I don't know. I'm going to check the speaker with another amp tomorrow. I suppose if another amp causes the weird movement then I can assume that the problem is with the speaker. It's highly possible that Randall produced an amp that had some issue in the output section, but I know my Traynor YBA-1 wouldn't have the same problem.
I just got in a new oscilloscope so perhaps I'll check the output of the amps for sub oscillation just for giggles, though I doubt that's the problem. I don't know if any oscillation would be visibly apparent in the speaker, and only one type of speaker at that.
Thanks for trying to make sense of this
I recently installed a used EVM-12s into a Randall RMS-150 combo amp (It's a 120watt solid state amp with a vented cab) and though the speaker sounds great in the amp I noticed that there is quite a lot of extraneous cone movement. It looks like every time I play a note (even the highest note on the guitar) the speaker will move like I'm putting a 2hz sign wave into it at 300 watts and most of the movement happens as the note is dying out and not during the initial attack. I can't really hear anything strange happening when it does this. The movement is almost slow enough to count the cycles and appears to be full cycle with complete in and out movement. I understand a little about speaker efficiency and why the EVM would be capable of more extreme excursion but I don't understand what could be causing it in this instance. Another detail is that I have two of the exact same amps so I checked whether the other amp caused the same movement, and it does, but only with the one speaker. This doesn't happen with any of the other three speakers I played the amp through. Just the EVM. The other speakers were a 200w celestion bass 12", JBL G125, and a Fender 100w.
I tried searching around for different speaker symptoms but was unable to come across anything similar relating to speaker failures, but there might be a term that I don't know. I'm going to check the speaker with another amp tomorrow. I suppose if another amp causes the weird movement then I can assume that the problem is with the speaker. It's highly possible that Randall produced an amp that had some issue in the output section, but I know my Traynor YBA-1 wouldn't have the same problem.
I just got in a new oscilloscope so perhaps I'll check the output of the amps for sub oscillation just for giggles, though I doubt that's the problem. I don't know if any oscillation would be visibly apparent in the speaker, and only one type of speaker at that.
Thanks for trying to make sense of this
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