My neighbor gave me a pair of JBL L112 speakers. The foam around the woofer is gone. Is it worth refoaming these speakers? or puting in a new woofer?
My neighbor gave me a pair of JBL L112 speakers. The foam around the woofer is gone. Is it worth refoaming these speakers? or puting in a new woofer?
refoaming, definitely!
http://audioheritage.org/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=469
Definitely! Just don't screw it up by using the incorrect surround or putting it on the wrong side. The L112's 128H woofer actually came in different cone sizes. Rick Cobb will walk you through how to make sure the kits he sends you will provide the best fit for what your L112s have in them.
This is a job where you can actually produce a better result than many self-proclaimed "professionals". Check out this thread: http://audioheritage.org/vbulletin/s...ad.php?t=26167
And, of course, if you don't want to do it yourself, there are real pros here who know how they're supposed to be done.
Many claim the L112 is one of the best, if not the best, 12" three-way "bookshelf" speakers ever produced by JBL. Do something nice for your neighbor!
". . . as you have no doubt noticed, no one told the 4345 that it can't work correctly so it does anyway."—Greg Timbers
More hyperbole with the intention of causing the newbie to take the job seriously . . . or pass them along as you suggests. Anything to give the Ebayers something to quote and cause a price boost!
I've enjoyed mine for almost thirty years, yet I actually always preferred listening to the 030s. :dont-know
". . . as you have no doubt noticed, no one told the 4345 that it can't work correctly so it does anyway."—Greg Timbers
Yes they are worth it, sonically and financially.
Excellent loudspeakers, you will enjoy them very much. I say this as I recently acquired a pair myself and know what they sound like. I own more than a few JBL systems from different decades and can assure you these are very nice sounding systems indeed.
If you don't like them for whatever the reason, you can sell them for significant money, but ONLY if they have been properly repaired. If you have never done it (re-edge) I would suggest you have a good service technician do it for you. There are cosmetic and mechanical concerns involved with this repair and the woofers in your new speakers are not good candidates for on the job training mistakes as these mistakes could prove very expensive to undo.
And DO NOT PLAY THESE SPEAKERS until you have them re-edged; you can damage them this way.
Thomas
Yeah, I was sort of referring to JBL models that more than ten people have actually seen, heard, or owned.
The reason I keep posting, rather tongue-in-cheek, that the L112 is considered among, if not the finest, is because I once read it here on this site. Most likely coincident with someone listing a pair on Epay! Certainly in their day there were few rivals in that "class". Regardless (and that, my fellow LH-ers is the proper usage of that term), they're well worth fixing, which really was all the original poster was asking. Let me look around and see if I have anything else I can use use to stir the pot here. Doesn't seem to take much these days!
". . . as you have no doubt noticed, no one told the 4345 that it can't work correctly so it does anyway."—Greg Timbers
I know if you guys had a pair of L112, you would refoam them real good ...
that should be recommendation enough, if anyone else is still reading ..!
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Rob
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