🔊 Stick with the Best: Elevate Your Repairs!
The Pro-Grade Black Rubberized Speaker Repair Adhesive Glue is a professional-grade, hexane-based adhesive that dries black and forms a permanent, flexible bond. Available in various sizes, this adhesive is specifically designed for speaker repairs, ensuring durability and ease of use.
C**N
This glue is actual black rubber!
I used this glue to fix the straps on my mom's purse. This is not black colored cyanoacrylate that can and will crack and harden and also change the surface texture of whatever it is used on. No, this is actual rubber in glue form that retains its rubbery property even when dry. It works perfectly. It's not just for speakers!I found use for this glue on my car cover too. I wanted to make my car cover street legal. I purchased a clear vinyl table cover and cut it to the size needed. I then cut a hole in my car cover at the windshield area and glued the clear vinyl piece to the car cover. I created a window to properly display the stickers for my car to avoid a ticket.We just had a bad storm the other day. This glue held the seal perfectly from vinyl to car cover fabric and did not loosen from the beating it took from that heavy rain and wind we had. I just bought another bottle of this glue in a bigger size as I foresee me finding more uses for it in the future. Excellent product.
P**E
Works great.
Repaired a couple speaks with diaphrams that needed regluing. All better. Sound great now.
M**G
Works Well
Works well. Saved money by fixing the speaker myself.
R**H
Great adhesion and workability.
I used this to repair my T1 12 Rockford Fosgate subwoofer, the cone had separated/torn from the surround. With no service cone available I used this to bond the cone back to the surround. It was easy to spread with ample time before it set-up. After allowing to cure for 24 hours to be certain it was properly bonded I tested it's durability, I am using a JL 1000 slash Amp tuned down to 32 hz and use an Epicenter when necessary, I have had no issues with delamination and saved a speaker that has lots of life left! Great product!
R**Y
Works great, but not a great value in 1/2 oz size
It works well as an adhesive and dries a slightly glossy black. The 1/2 oz bottle is quite small. It was enough to glue dust caps and foam surrounds on two 6x9 speakers that I removed the midrange and tweeter from to use as subs. There was only a little glue left. If you have something larger to do than a couple of 6x9s you should get the 1 oz bottle. If I had realized how small this 1/2 bottle was going to be I would have gotten a 1 oz bottle, just to have some leftover for other little projects or whatever. I did figure out that Acetone will revive it if it gets dried out. Just put a little Acetone in the bottle and let it sit sealed, come back to it later and stir it thoroughly.
A**R
put to excursion test -good
while listening to my daily driver at a low to medium volume, there was suddenly a rattling quite like the voice coil former was tagging the pole piece. had to finish drive home with no tunes in SoCal, bummer. got home and pulled the offending sub box. i found the pulp type cone had ripped off the foam surround about half way around. this is a ddaudio 1508, 500 watt rms, long throw 8 incher, pretty good at hard bass when you have two like i do. i will be getting a recone for this but i wanted to find out if a repair was feasible. i ordered this adhesive (Pro-Grade Black Rubberized Speaker Repair Adhesive Glue (1/2 oz) - Dries Black, Brand: Springfield Speaker ). while i waited for it to arrive, i slit the rest of the surround off of the cone while preserving the overlap, mirroring how the detachment was already. then i cut the dust cover off of the cone to expose the voice coil and pole piece. it is super important to ensure the voice coil travels exactly parallel to the pole piece. so, i stuck 3x5 cards evenly down the gap until the voice coil/cone was stiff to move. folding the surround back i squirted a layer of glue around the cone matching the old surround lines area. a couple minutes later as the first layer soaked in, i went around again with a thicker layer of glue to be sure i had plenty and not worried about tiny amounts of dribble, it's an out of sight sub after all. then, i pulled the cone up slowly to contact the surround plus a little more up, like an 1/8 inch or less, looking for good contact. the next day i went back and added a glue line over the thin lip of the surround and down to the pulp cone as more adhesion, i also added a lip of glue to the back side of the cone and surround, only missing small areas where the steel basket was in the way. a coupe hours later i pulled the 3x5 card shims out, blew out the voice coil with compressed air and glued the dust cover back on. the next day i dropped that sub back in its box and put it back in the daily driver. the first test was some old ying yang twins, me and my brother album. the suspension is already well broken in so i let that sub have it. and for a few minutes i went into over excursion just to see. i went long and hard enough to smell the voice coil adhesive till i backed it off a bit. the glue was holding perfectly and the sub sounded just like its twin that did not come apart. back to banging, and no odd noises, just like it should be. for the next week at nearly two hours a day commute i beat on those subs with gangsta rap/crunk and similar. 2 500watt ddauio 1508 on a jl audio 1200/1. then i went back to my normal metal/hard rock diet. it's been just over two weeks now and the adhesive sold here is still holding like the day i put it on. visual inspection, everything just like i glued it. i still plan to do a recone on this mfg in 2010 sub just because it's so old, but i'm going to wait a while and enjoy the $12 repair, knowing this is a cheap option for the future. good adhesive!
D**H
Awesome stuff
Ok, I was very skeptical about this stuff on ease of use and how expensive it was but it did the job and saved me from buying a new speaker. I repaired a Klipsch 10" sub woofer. The dust cone came off. I watched a video on how to use it, took my time and carefully prepared the original cone for reuse. Came out perfect. It is VERY stringy so be very careful and deliberate when applying. You do not get a redo. I also did what the video explained with using a large socket to hold the cone in place until cured. I think it was 21mm or 25mm. A socket when placed hole side down evenly displaces weight all around the dust cone. One last thing is make sure driver cone is moving freely and all dust is out of the channel before securing. Picture shown is the repaired cone. Just wish I could have used clear.
Trustpilot
2 days ago
2 weeks ago