I was given a non-working JBL E-120 which turns out to have a slipped magnet from failure of the adhesive between magnet and top plate.
My brother used to be a speaker repair professional, and, between the two of us, with pieces of wood and a large pry bar, we managed to remove the magnet from the basket with no damage either to the magnet or our fingers.
He tells me that, years ago, he managed to reset a magnet by completely shimming the voice coil gap to keep the magnet centered during reassembly with some hard plastic tubes. But it was tricky, and he no longer has these shims.
Most sources say that the ideal way to do this is to degauss the magnet, reassemble, and remagnetize, but, other than heating it to its Curie point, I don't know how the few speaker repair places that claim to be able to do this go about degaussing a large ceramic magnet.
At a certain point, it costs more to fix the speaker than it's worth, so I'm wondering if there are practical ways to degauss the magnet. I have a couple of friends who make ceramic art, and they must have access to kilns. I also have a ~8" diameter toroidal degaussing coil that plugs into the wall -- inherited from my grandfather, an engineering professor. I have no idea if that would be sufficient.
A local speaker repair shop does have a remagnetizer and will do that part of it for me. In fact, they were the ones who gave me the speaker, not wanting to mess with it themselves.
Why so much trouble over an E-120? I've got a client with a Leslie Model 18/Vibratone that needs a speaker, and there isn't a lot of clearance between the baffle and the back of the cabinet. JBL speakers of the D/K/E-120 series are very shallow.
My brother used to be a speaker repair professional, and, between the two of us, with pieces of wood and a large pry bar, we managed to remove the magnet from the basket with no damage either to the magnet or our fingers.
He tells me that, years ago, he managed to reset a magnet by completely shimming the voice coil gap to keep the magnet centered during reassembly with some hard plastic tubes. But it was tricky, and he no longer has these shims.
Most sources say that the ideal way to do this is to degauss the magnet, reassemble, and remagnetize, but, other than heating it to its Curie point, I don't know how the few speaker repair places that claim to be able to do this go about degaussing a large ceramic magnet.
At a certain point, it costs more to fix the speaker than it's worth, so I'm wondering if there are practical ways to degauss the magnet. I have a couple of friends who make ceramic art, and they must have access to kilns. I also have a ~8" diameter toroidal degaussing coil that plugs into the wall -- inherited from my grandfather, an engineering professor. I have no idea if that would be sufficient.
A local speaker repair shop does have a remagnetizer and will do that part of it for me. In fact, they were the ones who gave me the speaker, not wanting to mess with it themselves.
Why so much trouble over an E-120? I've got a client with a Leslie Model 18/Vibratone that needs a speaker, and there isn't a lot of clearance between the baffle and the back of the cabinet. JBL speakers of the D/K/E-120 series are very shallow.
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