Share your favorites on Show & Tell

Speaker? Amp?

In Electronics > Speakers > Show & Tell.
Electronics477 of 1001smallish old SQUARE D SAFETY SWITCHBell and Howell speaker.
2
Love it
0
Like it

fortapachefortapache loves this.
AnythingObscureAnythingObscure loves this.
Add to collection

    Please create an account, or Log in here

    If you don't have an account, create one here.


    Create a Show & TellReport as inappropriate


    Posted 7 years ago

    Corrinegayle
    (1 item)

    I would like to check this out to see if the 15in speaker works but I don't understand the plug or is it an amp.? How do I test this to make sure the speaker works. I guess is my question I'm baffled. Any information at this point would be great I don't know whether to finish the woods or leave it as is, don't even know how to look it up what is it called!! thanks

    Unsolved Mystery

    Help us close this case. Add your knowledge below.

    logo
    Speakers
    See all
    APARA Vintage Speaker Stands   Black Powder-Coated Steel  (One Pair)
    APARA Vintage Speaker Stands   Bla...
    $169
    Pair Of Chartwell LS3/5a 15ohms vintage speakers. Made in England !
    Pair Of Chartwell LS3/5a 15ohms vin...
    $960
    Vintage JBL HORN 2380A with DRIVER 2445J ! PRICE IS FOR A PAIR
    Vintage JBL HORN 2380A with DRIVER ...
    $290
    1 m Siemens 1937 1.9*1.1 mm cotton wire vintage audio copper speaker cable
    1 m Siemens 1937 1.9*1.1 mm cotton ...
    $8
    logo
    APARA Vintage Speaker Stands   Black Powder-Coated Steel  (One Pair)
    APARA Vintage Speaker Stands   Bla...
    $169
    See all

    Comments

    1. AnythingObscure AnythingObscure, 7 years ago
      It is definitely a speaker for *something*, perhaps an old electric organ or musical instrument of some sort, or maybe a PA system. The numbers around the actual speaker rim should be able to identify the manufacturer and date of that component, at least to those (not myself) who are more familiar with vintage audio equipment, but might not identify who actually built the cabinet or for what purpose.
      To test the speaker itself, it looks like you'd likely need to remove either the black or red wire from the screw terminals, then check across them both with an ohmmeter or continuity tester. After which, if a reading is indicated, you could probably try hooking up that white wire you added (?) to an audio source to see if anything made noise, but experiment with something cheap first (garage boombox, not the living room surround-sound system) as a 15" driver looking like that can probably eat some power... ;-)

    Want to post a comment?

    Create an account or login in order to post a comment.