Since the topic of Alnico speaker magnets and their susceptibility to demagnetization comes up from time to time, I thought I'd post this story.
A client of mine has a Leslie 122 that's never sounded right to me; the balance between horn and woofer was tilted very much towards the woofer, making it sound dull and bassy. Nothing I tried to restore the highs worked. Another Hammond/Leslie tech suggested that I try swapping in another known-good Jensen V-21 Alnico magnet horn driver, which I did. The difference was night and day; the speaker screamed like it should. So, the question was: what was wrong with the other driver? I'd had it apart and run every test I could think of on it such as DCR and impedance of the voice coil, etc... and the voice coil was in good shape and properly aligned both vertically and horizontally.
I brought the weak horn driver back to the shop (again) and, not having a gaussmeter, tried to think up with a way to test the magnet strength. I ended up putting a compass on the edge of wooden table and, holding the driver in my hand with the pole pointed towards the compass, I moved it in perpendicular to the earth's magnetic field to see how close I would need to get the driver to the compass to achieve full 90 degree deflection of the compass needle towards the driver. I did this with a couple of known-good drivers and then tried the weak one. I had to hold the weak one almost twice as close to the compass to get the same deflection. It's not very quantitative, but it seems to confirm the source of the problem.
Additional clues are that 1) while all other components in this Leslie are from 1971, the horn is from 1975, and 2) this Leslie was sold to my client by a guy with a large collection of Leslies and Leslie parts who's been know to dispose of components that don't work right by slipping them into organs and speakers that he typically sells to people who are buying their first "real" Hammond Organ or Leslie speaker. I've read that if an Alnico magnet is stored near a large ceramic magnet, like one attached to a woofer, with a field pointing in the opposite direction, the Alnico magnet can gradually get demagnetized -- or it can happen suddenly via a sharp blow.
I ran this by the experts on a Hammond/Leslie list, and I'm told that while a demagnetized horn driver is uncommon, it's definitely been observed before. This is my first direct observation of an Alnico magnet speaker driver that's lost sensitivity due to demagnetization.
Weber says they can zap it back to full strength.
A client of mine has a Leslie 122 that's never sounded right to me; the balance between horn and woofer was tilted very much towards the woofer, making it sound dull and bassy. Nothing I tried to restore the highs worked. Another Hammond/Leslie tech suggested that I try swapping in another known-good Jensen V-21 Alnico magnet horn driver, which I did. The difference was night and day; the speaker screamed like it should. So, the question was: what was wrong with the other driver? I'd had it apart and run every test I could think of on it such as DCR and impedance of the voice coil, etc... and the voice coil was in good shape and properly aligned both vertically and horizontally.
I brought the weak horn driver back to the shop (again) and, not having a gaussmeter, tried to think up with a way to test the magnet strength. I ended up putting a compass on the edge of wooden table and, holding the driver in my hand with the pole pointed towards the compass, I moved it in perpendicular to the earth's magnetic field to see how close I would need to get the driver to the compass to achieve full 90 degree deflection of the compass needle towards the driver. I did this with a couple of known-good drivers and then tried the weak one. I had to hold the weak one almost twice as close to the compass to get the same deflection. It's not very quantitative, but it seems to confirm the source of the problem.
Additional clues are that 1) while all other components in this Leslie are from 1971, the horn is from 1975, and 2) this Leslie was sold to my client by a guy with a large collection of Leslies and Leslie parts who's been know to dispose of components that don't work right by slipping them into organs and speakers that he typically sells to people who are buying their first "real" Hammond Organ or Leslie speaker. I've read that if an Alnico magnet is stored near a large ceramic magnet, like one attached to a woofer, with a field pointing in the opposite direction, the Alnico magnet can gradually get demagnetized -- or it can happen suddenly via a sharp blow.
I ran this by the experts on a Hammond/Leslie list, and I'm told that while a demagnetized horn driver is uncommon, it's definitely been observed before. This is my first direct observation of an Alnico magnet speaker driver that's lost sensitivity due to demagnetization.
Weber says they can zap it back to full strength.
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