Field Coil Speaker
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Currently working on a Goblin Time Spot with a field coil speaker. The speaker cone was badly torn and the field coil was open circuit so my initial thought was to replace it with a permanent magnet speaker and a separate filter choke. However, curiosity got the better of me so I decided to start unwinding the coil to see if I could find the break. Of course once you have started.....! About 3 hours later found the break right at the start of the coil! Break repaired and coil re-wound (another 3 hours), patched up the torn cone and the speaker is now working perfectly. I'm a happy bunny :)
The coil is 1500 ohms of 35 awg which equates to just under a mile of wire all done by hand - I think I've earned a beer :beer: |
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So do I :thumbsup:
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Hello Paul.
Well done outstanding work. I have 3 Goblin Time spot radios all working, and I never get tired of looking at them. Kevin. |
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Yes they are nice looking radios. Mine needs quite a bit of work, the chassis is quite rusty and the cabinet needs re-finishing but I think it will be worth the effort in the end.
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Well done Paul, nice job. :thumbsup:
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I was lucky with mine, the 'speaker is OK, but sometimes the clock starts backwards.
well done, hand winding, wow! RSI injury? Sam. |
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Funnily enough I've just been looking at the clock and surprise surprise that is open circuit as well. Time to think about building or buying a coil winder I think!
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Clock coils can be rewound with fewer turns of thicker wire then run from a small transformer. A standalone clock can use a basic wallwart though a space in the case would be better for one that's part of another unit.
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Wow - not just unwinding the coil, but presumably, at the same time, winding the wire onto a spool to reuse without kinking it, then rewinding the coil again? Quite a task, and in the true traditions of 'make do and mend' & 'waste not - want not'. I've only re-wound one field coil, and as with most things in life, the only time you think you might do it twice, is just before you've done it once! In my case, I simply used new wire and a homebrew motor -powered coil winder and that was challenging enough (2.3kms of wire).
I've hand-wound a 1,000 Ohm coil on a set of HR headphones by hand, and that was a doddle by comparison. |
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Fantastic work Paul, such tenacity and patience is commendable. Well done!
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Nice work on the coil...murphy's law was applied in your case :) it was the last piece of wire that was broken :)
I usually patch my speakers with kitchen paper soaked in a solution of wood glue and water, it works very well and retains flexibility and resistance. how did you patch that one? sometimes i keep modern speakers to reuse the cone and the modern foam suspension when the old one is badly damaged. when i reuse the cone i keep the original spider and voice coil and glue the new cone on it, sometimes keeping a bit of the old cone in place because they tend to be deeper....it works very well, sounds good and doesnt rattle. not for audiophile grade of course but more than enough to keep a radio going |
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Yep - great work Paul ...... and no departure from originality. Any clue as to why it went open .... green spot?
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Nice one well done Paul.
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Is that PVA glue covering the diaphragm and outer corrugations?
If it is the bass response is likely to be severely handicapped, I did that on my first speaker repair and the sound was very thin and somewhat quieter. Mike |
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Yes it is, unfortunately the original paper was so fragile it seemed to be the only way of doing anything with it. The sound quality is OK but not brilliant and as you say I'm sure the PVA will be having a negative effect on it. I might look into the possibility of grafting a new cone onto the existing voice coil at some point in the future.
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On my frequent visits to Thailand I found shops there that sell individual loudspeaker parts (sold with disco/PA type eqpt) parts include voice coils (imperial and metric sizes), rolled surrounds and cones. But alas they all use modern high flux ceramic permanent magnets, so don't give up on your field coil winding skills. They also sell the rigs for aligning and gluing the coils. You can barely buy basic components here in UK now except on-line. Backwards progress or what?
Mind you its a long way to go for a 50 Bhat voice coil...but a good excuse for a holiday. Robert |
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