Lavane
Lunatic Member
I remember them keeping up with a 80wpc integrated I had. Thanks for the info.Seventeens, the Twenty's 8-ohm twin, are muy plentiful and cheap.
I remember them keeping up with a 80wpc integrated I had. Thanks for the info.Seventeens, the Twenty's 8-ohm twin, are muy plentiful and cheap.



Painted vs unpainted tweeters is very common, BUT, if you look at mine, screw mounted were countersunk in the baffle, yours are flush mounted, which makes me think there were possibly original epoxied tweeters that were replaced with screw mounted, and the black one is mounted at an angle. I'd be curious to see what's under your tweeters regarding the cutouts. Later Six's tweeters were flush mounted as shown in my 1972's. You can also see in my Seventeens the tweeters are counter sunk in the baffles, and black painted.Wow, the person that I bought these from was correct, someone over the years actually painted right over the original cloth grills with black paint.
I carefully removed and I see now that I need to seal the surrounds.
That was a scary removal!
My goodness, these are difficult to stop listening to and so I can't imagine needing to recap.
Interesting, one tweeter has a black metal grill vs uncoated on the other.
I don't believe that the fabric was ever removed and the tweets sound exactly the same and so I think that they were installed like this from the factory, one black and one uncoated.
View attachment 1455051
Thank you! and thank you for detailing this.GREAT thread Ken! Just for kicks I thought I'd include some pics of the early version of the Model Five woofer and crossover vs the later one. This is an early Model Five woofer and crossover plate that I have here. Note the huge round three piece magnet structure on the woofer and the point-to-point wiring on the early crossover network assembly (1967 build date, serial #005071)
This woofer was used in the early Model Twelve as well.
From a 1972 pair here is the newer style of woofer (note the cone weight in grams written in black marker)
And the newer style circuit board crossover before recapping and contact cleaning (original caps, note the dual value caps they used):
Also, you are 100% correct about the smaller midrange speaker being used in the Twenty-One radio and extension speakers. Here is a shot of one of my Twenty-One radios that I'll get around to rebuilding some day (build date Aug 1966 serial #07447)
Good catch.Painted vs unpainted tweeters is very common, BUT, if you look at mine, screw mounted were countersunk in the baffle, yours are flush mounted, which makes me think there were possibly original epoxied tweeters that were replaced with screw mounted, and the black one is mounted at an angle. I'd be curious to see what's under your tweeters regarding the cutouts. Later Six's tweeters were flush mounted as shown in my 1972's. You can also see in my Seventeens the tweeters are counter sunk in the baffles, and black painted.
Glenn
Painted vs unpainted tweeters is very common, BUT, if you look at mine, screw mounted were countersunk in the baffle, yours are flush mounted, which makes me think there were possibly original epoxied tweeters that were replaced with screw mounted, and the black one is mounted at an angle. I'd be curious to see what's under your tweeters regarding the cutouts. Later Six's tweeters were flush mounted as shown in my 1972's. You can also see in my Seventeens the tweeters are counter sunk in the baffles, and black painted.
Glenn
The recap and surround reseal will make a very noticeable difference. You'll be amazed. Remember to seal the dust caps as well.Anyone reckon when mine were made? They’re ASV6, somewhere in the 15000 range. As a point of some interest, the original cloth looks slightly different than what I’ve seen on other model 6’s-a bit more coarse-grained and yellow, as opposed to the grayish-oatmeal that I seem to see around. Feel like I’ve seen it on some 17’s, and it certainly looked original. I replaced them with a similar-textured off-white linen a couple weeks ago, since the old ones were warped and stained and falling off the speakers.
I love how these things sound, but I definitely need to recap them and redope them soon-they’re still running on their original “Temple” caps, woofer returns immediately, and the stereo image feels pushed to the left unless I decrease the treble on the left speaker and keep the right one normal or increased (weird, but it seems to work). Granted, the right one is getting a longer and thinner wire from my amp due to space constraints. Gonna play around with that today and see if the problem changes.
Edit: Make sure your speaker cables match, y’all.


I have just picked up an original pair with serial numbers 133997 and 134048 that have the recessed terminals. FWIW.
I don't believe we've ever seen a screw mounted tweeter on a Six that wasn't countersunk. My guess is that a previous owner blew out the original expoxied tweeters and cut them out. Nothing wrong with the job they did as long as there is a good seal on the cabinet where they are mounted.
At least older than 1978.Anyone reckon when mine were made? They’re ASV6, somewhere in the 15000 range.

At least older than 1978.