Dave Locher
New member
I asked Eminence but have not heard back yet.
Short version: I am looking for an 8-ohm, 12" Eminence speaker that sounds a lot like the 1979 Celestion G12-65 speaker that I foolishly sold. Not a "clone," just the same sonic ballpark. Smoother, warmer, and/or darker would be fine as long as it can handle a lot of palm-muted "chunka chunka" without flubbing out.
I did a Google search on this topic but it was a lot of "I heard that..." and very little "In my first-hand experience..."
Long version: I totally wore out a pair of original G12-65s that I owned since around 1987 or so. I sold them and bought new speakers because I did not know then (d'oh!) there is a good speaker re-coning business an hour from where I live.
Originally I bought an Eminence Tonker because I was only going to run one speaker and it handles 150 watts. (My head is 120.) Then I suddenly had more money to spend so I bought a Tonkerlite. Eventually I realized the Tonker emphasized some frequency that annoys me and hurts my ears AND it would bottom out if I palm-muted an E chord so I sold it.
I then bought a WGS ET-65. LOVED that one, but got talked into buying a WGS Veteran 30 to pair with it. I never gelled with the Vet 30. It had too much honky midrange spike for me and I finally pulled it back out last week and dropped the Tonkerlite back in.
The combo of WGS ET65 + Eminence Tonkerlite sounds good but the Tonkerlite is bright for my taste. It doesn't annoy like the regular Tonker did and it doesn't bottom out when I chug, it's just a bit icepicky for my ears.
I realize I can just buy another WGS ET65 but I would like to get something that compliments it rather than another one of the exact same speaker. So I'm looking back to Eminence because the Tonker was close to what I want. It was smoother and maybe tighter than the ET65 is, and I want that. The problem is that weird high or high-mid frequency emphasis I didn't like and the farting out on the chunka chunka. I'm seeking the good qualities of the Tonker without the bad.
So...smooth, warm, dark, tight, without the weird honky mid-range spike of the Veteran 30 and without the problems of the Tonker.
Or should I just pony up the $150 for a Celestion "Heritage" series?
Short version: I am looking for an 8-ohm, 12" Eminence speaker that sounds a lot like the 1979 Celestion G12-65 speaker that I foolishly sold. Not a "clone," just the same sonic ballpark. Smoother, warmer, and/or darker would be fine as long as it can handle a lot of palm-muted "chunka chunka" without flubbing out.
I did a Google search on this topic but it was a lot of "I heard that..." and very little "In my first-hand experience..."
Long version: I totally wore out a pair of original G12-65s that I owned since around 1987 or so. I sold them and bought new speakers because I did not know then (d'oh!) there is a good speaker re-coning business an hour from where I live.
Originally I bought an Eminence Tonker because I was only going to run one speaker and it handles 150 watts. (My head is 120.) Then I suddenly had more money to spend so I bought a Tonkerlite. Eventually I realized the Tonker emphasized some frequency that annoys me and hurts my ears AND it would bottom out if I palm-muted an E chord so I sold it.
I then bought a WGS ET-65. LOVED that one, but got talked into buying a WGS Veteran 30 to pair with it. I never gelled with the Vet 30. It had too much honky midrange spike for me and I finally pulled it back out last week and dropped the Tonkerlite back in.
The combo of WGS ET65 + Eminence Tonkerlite sounds good but the Tonkerlite is bright for my taste. It doesn't annoy like the regular Tonker did and it doesn't bottom out when I chug, it's just a bit icepicky for my ears.
I realize I can just buy another WGS ET65 but I would like to get something that compliments it rather than another one of the exact same speaker. So I'm looking back to Eminence because the Tonker was close to what I want. It was smoother and maybe tighter than the ET65 is, and I want that. The problem is that weird high or high-mid frequency emphasis I didn't like and the farting out on the chunka chunka. I'm seeking the good qualities of the Tonker without the bad.
So...smooth, warm, dark, tight, without the weird honky mid-range spike of the Veteran 30 and without the problems of the Tonker.
Or should I just pony up the $150 for a Celestion "Heritage" series?