Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Magnepan SMGa
#1

I have had these for about 10 years, bought second hand. At that time, they needed a complete rebuild of the wires glued to the Mylar diaphragm.

Amazingly, the company still supplies kits to repair a product produced in 1988! At the time, I replaced the wiring on both panels, and they have worked brilliantly untill last night. Alas, the right tweeter (very fine enameled aluminum wire) has failed. I will have to open up the speaker strip the old wire and re adhere a new run.

I will share some pictures of the construction and process... but it will have to wait a couple of weeks until after the holidays.

Cheers

Ed

I don't hold with furniture that talks.
#2

This weekend's other project was to replace the wiring on the tweeter panel on the SMGAs

First job is to -carefully- strip the old wires away from the diaphragm using acetone to dissolve the adhesive layers, and clean the surface in preparation for the new wires

After that, spray adhesive is applied (masking areas where this is not wanted). 3M Super77 is the order of the day. Apparently the inventor (Jim Winey) was a 3M employee, and on seeing Mylar film and various adhesive products he was inspired to experiment with loudspeakers. Once the glue is ready, It takes a steady hand to lay out the wire pattern:

   

The whole speaker consists of a bass/treble section of heavier gauge wire, and a slender section for high frequencies:

   

A simple crossover (one inductor, one capacitor) takes care of dividing the audio between the two circuits.

Once the glue is dry, an over-coat of water based adhesive is applied, per the factory instructions.

Then the wire tails can be soldered to the tag strip. Here is where things get tricky, because the wire is enamel coated Aluminum (for light weight). Even with aluminum solder and good flux, it isn't easy to get a good joint.

All done now!

Cheers

Ed

I don't hold with furniture that talks.




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
[-]
Recent Posts
Shadow Meter Bulb
Any 6.3 volt pilot light will work. I would use the brightest one I could find in my workroom. Be sure the dial is clean...RodB — 10:45 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
Tim, nice write up and thanks for sharing !! Sincerely Richardradiorich — 02:47 AM
HiFi (Chifi) tube amp build - but my own design.
Well, this was a real "Hum-Dinger" :lol: ! This will be kinda long, but hopefully it will help others having t...TV MAN — 01:55 AM
Shadow Meter Bulb
Phorum members, I am trying to find the bulb # for PHILCO Shadow Meter part number 45-2180 that is from a 37-640 chassis...georgetownjohn — 06:53 PM
Philco 41-608 changer coupler
3D-printing...short of machining, of course. Or molding.morzh — 05:20 PM
Philco 41-608 changer coupler
Thanks, Morzh. That solves the issue of the rubber pieces. Now, I need to find a way to replicate the pot metal piec...alangard — 05:07 PM
12' Philco
If it is 12', either Kareem or Andre would have to jump pretty high to look at the front panel. Kareem would have an e...morzh — 01:48 PM
12' Philco
And here's a story about the tires on the truck. Same "no-stoop" guy must have installed these! Take care a...GarySP — 01:17 PM
Hickok AC51 tube tester
I think they have only shown the secondaries of the transformer. Two of them feed the rectifiers' filaments.morzh — 12:58 PM
IF can wire size and Rubber mounts?
Arran If the wire inside cans is the gauges you mentioned, the sole reason for that would be mechanical, to stiffen t...morzh — 12:56 PM

[-]
Who's Online
There are currently 7857 online users. [Complete List]
» 3 Member(s) | 7854 Guest(s)
AvatarAvatarAvatar

>