Anyone know who repairs or rebuilds woofers?


Hi to all...

I have a pair of (from approx.2000) Gershman Avant Garde RX20s, one with a blown woofer - does anyone know who could either repair, rebuild or construct a new woofer for me?

I have contacted Gershman Acoustics: due to the age of the speaker, they no longer have replacement woofers for this model. They do have midrange, tweeter and crossover... Woofers in the current Avant Garde are larger in diameter - which would mean recutting a larger hole and replacing the woofers in each of the speaker pair.

Did a read-thru of other forum entries about woofer repairs, and Millersound might be a possibility - I will follow up with them... But Any other suggestions would be appreciated...
insearchofprat
Not sure what you mean by "blown"......the cone itself is torn?......the voice coil has welded itself to the pole piece? the surround has either rotted or separated from the frame? Bill Watkins of Watkins Stereo may be able to fix it or suggest an adequate replacement. www.watkinsstereo.com 
Stick with Bill, at Millersound.     You’d be hard-pressed to find someone more knowledgeable, or capable, regarding the repair of your speakers.     http://www.millersound.net/contact-bill-legall-millersound.html
If it's just reconing those services are fairly easy to find via a Google search.
I’d like to hear them!

Very specific cone design/construction.

Does OEM think the current larger woofer can work in that cabinet/crossover designed for original smaller woofer? If so, you would need to remove or protect the other drivers while a woodworker enlarged the holes. Ask OEM about the internal connections, if soldered, protection and carefully chosen woodworker is probably the way to go. Cutting wires, good insulated bullet connectors or soldered heat shrink connections could be successfully added in line as another option.

OEM might have an idea how to modify the existing crossover, OR, change the crossover. Many OEM's or Modifiers often upgrade the quality of crossover parts over the years, it might be a great synergistic change.

Perhaps you need ALL the specs of the original woofer, search for same size new woofer with near identical specs, to perform as close as possible with the crossover/other drivers, ...

Keep in mind, any larger woofer would normally be put in a larger enclosure for a cubic volume designed primarily for the woofer’s controlled response and balance to the other drivers, so knowing .. will not be the full answer.

My speakers, made 1958, 15" woofers, horn midrange, horn tweeter, in addition to OEM’s crossover, incorporated two OEM rheostats: Brilliance, and Presence.

That has helped me adjusting them in 4 different spaces, and moving the drivers to new custom enclosures. IF you find a near match, or OEM thinks their current slightly larger driver will work, perhaps suggest this ’presence’ rheostat idea, perhaps tame the larger woofer’s output bit by bit while listening in your space.

Luckily, replacement cones with the old cloth surrounds are available, I replaced the cones twice, once by a pro, once by me.

Rheostats: It must be said, balancing the frequency response L to R is not easy, I find my Mode switch on my McIntosh preamp the key to success, switching stereo to mono, all l, all r, l tor, r to l. And, Oscar Peterson’s Piano and Cassandra Wilson’s voice quite revealing. You don’t want any wandering at certain frequencies.

Perhaps a stereo crossover, specifically chosen for bass would be a better idea and eliminate the l/r matching issue. I cannot do that because the rheostats exist, and must be matched l/r prior to any stereo crossover.