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James B. Lansing - JBL D130 Vintage Speaker, Tested and Working Properly

Sale price£0.00
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Pickup currently unavailable at SkyFi 479

James B. Lansing - Jbl D130 Vintage Speaker Tested And Working Properly Speakers

James B. Lansing - JBL D130 Vintage Speaker, Tested and Working Properly

SkyFi 479

Pickup currently unavailable

479 South Broad Street
Glen Rock NJ 07452
United States

+12018790000

This listing is for a single D130 in what looks to be new, or like new condition. 

The D130 was also featured in the famous Grateful Dead "Wall of Sound"! Check Google for many photos.

Measures as it should with a multimeter as shown in our photos.

Working as it should with no rubbing, raspiness or static of any sort.

In a heavy-duty box for safe shipping.

JBL D130 Circa 1955

Harman International, Courtesy Mark Gander and John Eargle

If one component can be said to embody the innovation, quality and attention to detail that defined JBL, it has to be the D130. This wide range 15" driver was introduced in 1948 and remains in production to this day as the updated E130. This driver was responsible for establishing the nascent James B Lansing Sound as a force to be reckoned with in the loudspeaker industry.

The D130 was the second low frequency loudspeaker introduced by James B. Lansing Sound after the D101 of 1946. It was personally designed and developed by James Lansing. It incorporated a 4" flat wire voice coil attached to a light, curvilinear cone with a 4" aluminum diaphragm instead of a standard dust cap to extend high frequency response. The coil was immersed in one of the strongest permanent magnetic fields yet developed for a loudspeaker. It resulted in a driver with outstanding sensitivity, range and dynamic response.

The 4" flat wire coil was the single most innovative feature of this design. It was the first low frequency driver to incorporate a coil of this large diameter. To achieve the maximum motor strength, the coil gap was designed to be a very narrow 0.05". The degree of precision necessary to maintain such a large, exact circular shape for both the coil and the gap was unheard of at the time. It was years before competitors were able to match this feat.

The advantages of this innovation are many. The large coil dissipates heat more efficiently, increasing power handling and reducing dynamic compression. The large coil also places more wire in the gap for fewer turns. This allowed the coil to use a single layer of wire that could fit in a narrower gap. The result is maximum utilization of the energy from the magnetic structure and maximum efficiency. Finally, the large diameter coil yields a stronger moving structure since the force applied to the coil is transferred to the cone over a larger area. The cone is therefore less prone to breakup.

There virtually is no loudspeaker market for which the D130 did not find application. In the 1950's through the 1960's, it was the loudspeaker that defined the home hi-fi phenomenon. It was used in more component hi-fi systems of that era than any other speaker. It was the workhorse driver used in James B. Lansing Sound's first commercial systems for the movie industry. It became a mainstay in the musician's market after Leo Fender incorporated a version of it in his early amplifiers. In the rock era of the seventies, it was common to see walls of D130's providing sound reinforcement at concerts.

Item

Included

Original Box

Not Included

Manual

Not Included

Remote

Not Applicable

Cables

Available Separately

Physical Condition

8 / 10

Working Condition

10 / 10

SKU: 101538