Never measured speaker distortion per se, but itīs a given.
In general best Guitar speaker cones are **thin** , thatīs universal, and ribbing, specially deep ribbing, where a cone section looks like corrugated tin roof is best.
All cones break up but ribbing guarantees it happening at all frequencies , in a controlled way.
FWIW a 12" Celestion speaker has 8 ribs, you might say itīs optimized for Humbuckers ; a Fenderish speaker (Jensen or Eminence) can have up to 22, you might say itīs optimized for much brighter single coils.
Celestion also uses thicker paper and larger voice coils (44 mm) than Jensen (N=38 mm ; Q=32mm ; R=25mm)
Since I had to import a ton of cones which will last a lifetime I had to choose *one* flavour, so got an 11 ribs cone, which covers both grounds acceptably.
As you see, there are A TON of variables to "cook" speakers in different flavours.
Some cone examples.
A couple do not match the expected ribbing, but consider the intended use: a Jensen made for a Hammond organ does not need "Telecaster highs" but robust midrange instead; I make an 8" "improved" speaker for typical 15/25W practice amps, and chose an unribbed and slightly thicker cone, larger diameter voice coil (25mm instead of typical 19mm) , substantially larger and heavier magnet, thicker plates, because typical complaint about practice amps is "they sound thin, buzzy, mosquito like" ... guys canīt believe the difference.
Late CTS/early Eminence from Ampeg V4B cabinet
Typical Celestion
Heavily doped Fahey G12
1947 Hammond Jensen A12
As a side note, all Guitar voice coils are very short, from same plate thickness to maybe 1 to 3 mm longer (tops) so they leave the gap all the time and distort.
FWIW an Eminence Legend (guitar) and an Alpha (PA) are "exactly the same speaker" as far as frame and magnet yet sound completely different: the Alpha cone is much thicker, sparsely ribbed (and extra thickness negates breakup), voice coil is 50% longer, double weight, look at both curves side by side: 2 dB less efficiency, but mainly the strong 8 to 10dB peak around 2500 to 3500Hxz is gone, so they have no bite.
Thatīs why you must never have to send your speakers to a "general purpose" reconer, heīll "improve" your "crappy" speaker by using standard Hi Fi or best case PA type components, and murder your guitar sound.
In general best Guitar speaker cones are **thin** , thatīs universal, and ribbing, specially deep ribbing, where a cone section looks like corrugated tin roof is best.
All cones break up but ribbing guarantees it happening at all frequencies , in a controlled way.
FWIW a 12" Celestion speaker has 8 ribs, you might say itīs optimized for Humbuckers ; a Fenderish speaker (Jensen or Eminence) can have up to 22, you might say itīs optimized for much brighter single coils.
Celestion also uses thicker paper and larger voice coils (44 mm) than Jensen (N=38 mm ; Q=32mm ; R=25mm)
Since I had to import a ton of cones which will last a lifetime I had to choose *one* flavour, so got an 11 ribs cone, which covers both grounds acceptably.
As you see, there are A TON of variables to "cook" speakers in different flavours.
Some cone examples.
A couple do not match the expected ribbing, but consider the intended use: a Jensen made for a Hammond organ does not need "Telecaster highs" but robust midrange instead; I make an 8" "improved" speaker for typical 15/25W practice amps, and chose an unribbed and slightly thicker cone, larger diameter voice coil (25mm instead of typical 19mm) , substantially larger and heavier magnet, thicker plates, because typical complaint about practice amps is "they sound thin, buzzy, mosquito like" ... guys canīt believe the difference.
Late CTS/early Eminence from Ampeg V4B cabinet
Typical Celestion
Heavily doped Fahey G12
1947 Hammond Jensen A12
As a side note, all Guitar voice coils are very short, from same plate thickness to maybe 1 to 3 mm longer (tops) so they leave the gap all the time and distort.
FWIW an Eminence Legend (guitar) and an Alpha (PA) are "exactly the same speaker" as far as frame and magnet yet sound completely different: the Alpha cone is much thicker, sparsely ribbed (and extra thickness negates breakup), voice coil is 50% longer, double weight, look at both curves side by side: 2 dB less efficiency, but mainly the strong 8 to 10dB peak around 2500 to 3500Hxz is gone, so they have no bite.
Thatīs why you must never have to send your speakers to a "general purpose" reconer, heīll "improve" your "crappy" speaker by using standard Hi Fi or best case PA type components, and murder your guitar sound.
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