The Fine Things are Always Hand Made
hi,
can anyone help with the voice coil impedance on an allwave fifteen,
the cone has been removed but the spider and a badly damaged voice coil is still there,
the wire gauge of the coil is about 30 awg, and there are 64 turns, feeding this into an online calculator I get 3.4 ohms.
is this correct?
i was expecting somewhere around 8 ohms or higher.
the speaker is a cast basket pedestal type.
many thanks
mike
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At what frequency did you calculate the impedance? I am not sure but I think that 1000-hz is the frequency at which voice coil impedance is usually specified.
Norman
Hi Norman
Unfortunately the only measurement I can give is dc resistance, the coil is in such a state, several turns missing, only the shadow left in the old adhesive,
I have been down the rewind route before and usually an 8 ohm coil won't be too far off on dc,
I have read before about odd impedance readings but they are usually higher.
thanks
mike
Mike - I get 5.1 ohms resistance on a digital meter. So 6 - 7 or so ohms impedance.
I have an AW-15 speaker (the correct 12 inch Jensen made pedestal) that is a bit rough but the voice coil is intact. I lifted on one of wires from output transformer to measure the voice coil resistance,
Did not know VC was 2 layers of wire. Assume you got an accurate gage of the old wire.
I have had my hands on several of those Jensens for the AW-12 and AW-15.
So far, every AW-12 speaker had good field coils.
Half of the AW-15 speakers had an open field winding. Bias winding OK, B+ open.
Hope yours are OK.
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