I was wondering if anyone has tried out 1950s field-coil speakers like the Jensen F12N for use with low-powered guitar amps.
I'm not going for the magic of obsolete technology; I'm just curious as to whether they actually have higher sensitivity than the PM models that followed. As an organ tech, I have access to them for much less than the nutty prices some are paying for them on eBay, and building a stand-alone power supply is easy enough.
I have four Leslies, and three of them use the field-coil Jensen F15LL, which was Don Leslie's personal favorite of all the woofers he tried in his cabinets. I've tried running guitar through them via the Leslie amps, but as fifteens, they don't have much high end, not to mention that the Leslie amps have some low-pass filtering built in. (You can plug the woofers directly into the amps, bypassing the crossover.) However, in the bass region--with 300V across the coil--a 20W 21H amp with a field-coil woofer will run circles around a 122 with a PM speaker.
I'm not going for the magic of obsolete technology; I'm just curious as to whether they actually have higher sensitivity than the PM models that followed. As an organ tech, I have access to them for much less than the nutty prices some are paying for them on eBay, and building a stand-alone power supply is easy enough.
I have four Leslies, and three of them use the field-coil Jensen F15LL, which was Don Leslie's personal favorite of all the woofers he tried in his cabinets. I've tried running guitar through them via the Leslie amps, but as fifteens, they don't have much high end, not to mention that the Leslie amps have some low-pass filtering built in. (You can plug the woofers directly into the amps, bypassing the crossover.) However, in the bass region--with 300V across the coil--a 20W 21H amp with a field-coil woofer will run circles around a 122 with a PM speaker.
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