Spendor SP 1/2e....TECH HELP NEEDED!


 

Hey all, I figured this is the best place to get some advice for my spendor sp1/2e's that I grabbed for about 1k off of shopgoodwill a while back (I know, I know, not ideal).

Love the sound, and absolutely blown away by the midrange. Killer speaker all around and by far the best I've run.

Unfortunately, it looks like the right speaker is failing. I think both the mid tweeter and the woofer. The right speakeer sound is noticeably less than the left, clarity is all off. Sound is muddy, mid is buried, and volume is lower. When I press the woofer, there's a slight scratch (voice coil?) and I have a feeling they're due for a tune up or an upgrade.

I've paired to Scott 222, Marantz 2285b, Marantz 2240 and an ArcamA19 and the problem is persistent.

I have found new tweeters, and midrange drivers (the same scanspeak models as the cabinet) that are available for purchase.

Should I go about finding replacement scanspeak drivers and upgrading/replacing the set or should I ditch them and go to something else?

If I were to ditch and get new speakers, budget is roughly $2k ish. Would prefer to keep repairs below $1500.

Was thinking about ditching and going with either the Falcons LS3/5a or some used Harbeths (but have never heard either). My fear is that trying to stay in the spendor line and go new is going to be the classics ($14k) and thats not an option.

Thoughts on what to do?

ellisjnorman

You will be very happy with them when they are restored. Great speakers. What's the condition of the cabinets by the way? 

Well then, you've got a great set of speakers there that you'll really enjoy and be proud to show off. They are old school for sure, but I love that. I had the SP100's twice and loved them. 

The first thing I would try is borrow a integrated amp from someone .

Its possible it’s not your speakers but a channel on your electronics .

rule of thumb. Always confirm ,by testing every combination .

your equipment sounds old all the more reason to check ,1 bad or old capacitor or resistor can compromise a channel.