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Someone on my local Craigslist is selling a pair for $1200.
Someone on my local Craigslist is selling a pair for $1200.He says they have been totally rebuilt - the voice coils, spiders, interconnects, foam surrounds, and everything inside the cone that is essential to aligning of the cone among other acoustic qualities.
Change the recone kt from a driver is not rocket science but its good the tech have experience in the task and tech info from the factory.Note that changing the type or amount of acoustic stuffing inside the enclosure will change the sound. That stuffing is a personal taste as it can change the sound in a bold way.
All Ohm F’s are beginning the end of their functional lives. There is a foam damping material used around the base of the driver and inside that is failing from old age. We have never successfully repaired an Ohm F that was failing this way (the cone gets modified when you remove the old material and no longer sounds the same). For years, we replaced the old drivers with new ones. The last of these were made when the last craftsman retired. No more originals are available. But a series of upgrades with second generation drivers are available.
A friend, who is a vintage speaker fan, owns a pair. Very few know how to recondition that unique driver, prices therefore are all over the place. Yes, bass heavy and treble light, but make a very pleasing (vintage) sound and they can be placed almost anywhere to provide a realistic soundstage. My friend warns us at every audio meeting that the multi-material cone can easily be ruined by being overdriven, so not well suited for parties, rocking out, or use in a large room.
What is the material in question?There are plenty subs to replace it.