I was playing my guitar through my Laney VC30 the other day and noticed something. The speakers had this high end fizzle to the sound when the amp was set to about 7 or 8. The more the speakers were pushed with the natural gain of the amp, the more the speaker had thiis really high, trebly fizz. When backed off, the speakers sound fine. Very bright, chimey, and hollow. When the amp gets naturally overdriven and when the speakers are pushed hard, the high end fizz comes back. Not a warm, speaker fuzz, but a brittle and glassy fizz in the treble thats very prominent. The speakers are Jensen C12R speakers. I looked at the speakers and nothing seems wrong. I looked up my speakers online and noticed that mine looked slightly different than the current Jensen C12R's.
Come to find out... the speakers I have aren't the newer Jensen reissues. The speakers in my amp are made back in 1967. So I have a set of 1967 Jensen C12R's in my Laney. Are these speakers known to get fizzy at loud volumes with a slight bit of overdrive? The speakers look almost mint. The cone doesn't look damaged and the coils look fine. Could the speakers be on the verge of blowing out?
Tom
Come to find out... the speakers I have aren't the newer Jensen reissues. The speakers in my amp are made back in 1967. So I have a set of 1967 Jensen C12R's in my Laney. Are these speakers known to get fizzy at loud volumes with a slight bit of overdrive? The speakers look almost mint. The cone doesn't look damaged and the coils look fine. Could the speakers be on the verge of blowing out?
Tom
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