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ColinR Über Contributor 1000+
Joined: 31 Jul 2004 Posts: 1175 Location: Staffordshire
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Posted: Fri Nov 17, 2006 11:10 pm Post subject: White belly B110 fact or B.S? |
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The only "white belly" B110's & B200's I know have some damp / water damage such that the PVA based dope has parted from the Bextrene.
The effect can be reversed with a little rain water (mildly acidic), gentle pressure and a greenhouse!
For those still into "white belly" mythology.
PVA is transparent when it dries . _________________ This post or any other information supplied to this website or any other by myself is not available for any form of commercial purpose i.e. to hi-fi magazines or as sales and marketing material for sleezeBay or Audiodogging pimps and the like. |
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Thierry Intermediate Contributor 75+
Joined: 02 Sep 2010 Posts: 81 Location: France - Outskirts of Paris
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 1:41 pm Post subject: |
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Very interesting indeed.
Can someone explain what PVA is ? Is it an acronym for PolyVinyl Acetate ?
If so, is PVA easily available and where ? I assume there are several trading names for this polymer but I can't find any.
Thanks,
Thierry |
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ColinR Über Contributor 1000+
Joined: 31 Jul 2004 Posts: 1175 Location: Staffordshire
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 1:52 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: | Can someone explain what PVA is ? Is it an acronym for PolyVinyl Acetate ?
If so, is PVA easily available and where ? |
PVA - aka white woodglue.
Evo-stik from Evode now owned by Bostik is 3.5km from me, useful for cabinet making.
However.
For speaker repairs the cheaper the better i.e. it smells slightly fishy because of the amine impurites.
Wharfedale used a thinned down version with added catering eggwhite to dope their cones.
KEF just used a thinned down version . _________________ This post or any other information supplied to this website or any other by myself is not available for any form of commercial purpose i.e. to hi-fi magazines or as sales and marketing material for sleezeBay or Audiodogging pimps and the like. |
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Thierry Intermediate Contributor 75+
Joined: 02 Sep 2010 Posts: 81 Location: France - Outskirts of Paris
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 1:56 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Colin,
Thanks a lot indeed !
Does your description mean that a B110B could be rejuvenated if some of the PVA has gone to heaven like here http://www.hifiloudspeakers.info/speakertalk/viewtopic.php?t=1131 ??
More I spend time studying my newly acquired 105s and more I find KEF solutions very smart, elegant and well engineered. A true example of good engineering, really.
Thierry |
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ColinR Über Contributor 1000+
Joined: 31 Jul 2004 Posts: 1175 Location: Staffordshire
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 2:05 pm Post subject: |
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In theory yes, but experimenting with various >90%-80%< solutions of PVA glue will take a lot of spray gun time and test pieces made of Bextrene. _________________ This post or any other information supplied to this website or any other by myself is not available for any form of commercial purpose i.e. to hi-fi magazines or as sales and marketing material for sleezeBay or Audiodogging pimps and the like. |
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Thierry Intermediate Contributor 75+
Joined: 02 Sep 2010 Posts: 81 Location: France - Outskirts of Paris
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 2:22 pm Post subject: |
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I understand the try and error process. I have old B200s to play with, I may have a try. |
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speakerguru Über Contributor 1000+
Joined: 18 Nov 2005 Posts: 1192 Location: Green Hut, Tovil
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 7:16 pm Post subject: |
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ColinR wrote: | KEF just used a thinned down version |
Bextrene cones had one coat of AD7 (which did stick to bextrene) and 2 coats of AD18 (which had the required damping properties but did not stick to bextrene) on the back. The front had only one, more or less cosmetic coat of AD18. It clung on but did not really stick. You could peel it off and recoat if required. The stuff on the back did the real damping and could be controlled by weighing the coated cone as you applied it. The front coat became thinner and thinner as years went by but was never left off because "you had to see" that there was damping compound being used. AD18 had various other internal KEF AD numbers as different thinned versions were used.
Although AD18 was a type of PVA, trade name "Plastiflex", it was a bookbinding adhesive. It was not a regular white glue wood adhesive nor was it made by Evode or Bostik. I'm sorry I can't remember who made it or what it was replaced with when it eventually became unavailable. |
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ColinR Über Contributor 1000+
Joined: 31 Jul 2004 Posts: 1175 Location: Staffordshire
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Posted: Mon Sep 06, 2010 7:44 pm Post subject: |
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Quote: | was a type of PVA, trade name "Plastiflex", it was a bookbinding adhesive |
Made by Henkel, however as they sold and swapped several chemical works sites with Dupont, ICI, Great Lakes and BASF and what information Google gives as to who owns and does what these days is most likely not relevant for this type of application.
The clue is cheap "fishy smelling PVA" the amines allow better dispersion in water increasing a spray gun's ability to lift; in bookbinding they're biocides. _________________ This post or any other information supplied to this website or any other by myself is not available for any form of commercial purpose i.e. to hi-fi magazines or as sales and marketing material for sleezeBay or Audiodogging pimps and the like. |
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proffski Über Contributor 1000+
Joined: 22 Aug 2003 Posts: 1297 Location: Tewkesbury UK
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Posted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 9:14 pm Post subject: |
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On a visit to the NAIM factory in Salisbury many years ago I saw the drivers for the SBL? being coated by hand on some sort of a turntable with a brush.
Later the cones were graded and weighed before they stuck those dampening metal pads onto the rear of the magnet (aluminium) and (brass?) to the stamped metal chasis.
Anyway I meander, when the cones were being weighed I was amazed as to ho accurate and repeatable this was being done by a human being and a brush! _________________ I contend that for a nation to try to tax itself into prosperity is like a
man standing in a bucket and trying to lift himself up by the handle.
-Winston Churchill |
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MGM Intermediate Contributor 25+
Joined: 13 Nov 2014 Posts: 36 Location: Witney Oxon
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Posted: Sat Dec 27, 2014 9:56 am Post subject: |
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If you have your LS3/5as calibrated by Derek Hughes, he will often add some damping to the B110s cones as well as any adjustments to the crossover.
I was informed by a former BBC employee that some early LS3/5as ( before commercial production began) had PVA added around the B110's dust cap to tame resonances.
My 'own build' models ( with early B110s ) may require it when I get around to shipping them to Derek Hughes.
M Miles. _________________ M G Miles |
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