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Topic: 15" JBL D130F in Twin Reverb |
Tele
From: Andy W. - Wolfenbuettel, Germany
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Posted 3 May 2000 11:58 am
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Hi
I could get a 1960s D130F 8 Ohm speaker, can I put it in a Twin Reverb Reissue?? Are the Twins 4 or 8 Ohms???
Andy |
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Brandin
From: Newport Beach CA. USA
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Posted 3 May 2000 12:50 pm
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A Fender Twin is 4 ohm. |
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Tele
From: Andy W. - Wolfenbuettel, Germany
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Posted 3 May 2000 1:49 pm
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will I loose power, if so how much and what about tone? |
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Brandin
From: Newport Beach CA. USA
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Posted 3 May 2000 8:39 pm
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Yes. I'm not sure how much. I believe the
JBL D-130F is a great sounding speaker.[This message was edited by Brandin on 03 May 2000 at 09:42 PM.] |
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Karl Nutt
From: Fayette City, PA U.S.A.
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Posted 4 May 2000 4:31 am
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I have a 135 watt Twin Reverb that I bought a new MOJOTONE Vibrosonic cabnet for. It's loaded with a JBL D-130 4 ohm and sounds GREAT! Lighter than 2 12's too!!! (Not as heavy???) |
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Rich Paton
From: Santa Maria, CA.,
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Posted 6 May 2000 5:07 pm
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Try the D130F in an extension cabinet, and connect the 12's in the twin in series. This gives an overall load of 8ohms + 8ohms (16ohms)in parallel with 8ohms (5.33ohms overall impedance),which is perfectly suitable as a load on a 4 ohm amp. Make sure all speakers are in phase. You can connect a 1.5v "D" cell to the speaker lead(s) ~momentarily~, to observe the direction of cone travel, to check this. |
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Bob Metzger
From: Waltham (Boston), MA, USA
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Posted 8 May 2000 2:26 am
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You could change the output transformer to one designed for 4 x 6L6 and an 8 ohm output (like a Vibrosonic Reverb). Also, Twins sound great for steel with 6550's but you have to add a pretty big filament transformer if you use 6550's to keep the amp happy.
Bob |
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