Dude, where's my bass? Oh, lost to stiffened rubber surrounds...who knew?


Started a thread on "Cables" re: better cables to help restore bass to my B&W CM-4 speakers...so while preparing and listening to speakers for cable evaluation, our daughter - who has very acute hearing, unlike my senior ears! - noticed sort of a "crackling" sound in left speaker, and sure enough, removing cloth speaker covers, we notice a 6cm hairline fracture in the surround of the mid-range cone.  In fact, checking the rubber surrounds of bass and mid-range cones in both speakers, there were significant areas of stiffened and brittle rubber material, which - I would presume - drastically muted the speaker responses to incoming audio signal.  So, what to do?  Can the surrounds themselves be replaced w/o impairing cone native sonic qualities?  Totally new area here for me, having never dealt with material failure or deterioration in speaker components.  Suggestions most welcome!
compass_rose

Showing 1 response by wesheadley

I have a set of Genesis III's and two of their Servo12's-- all of the woofers used foam surrounds and after about 12 years the foam began to fail on many of them-- used a local speaker restoration specialist and he recommended using a light rubber replacement surround instead of the foam-- I went with that and did them all-- that was more than ten years ago and they all sound great to this day. I never noticed any degradation in the sound quality-- and in the case of the subs I think it made a small improvement. Would do it again in a second if I had to.