boneyguy
Doctor of Teleocity
I'm curious as to what purpose a grill cloth frame serves in front of the baffle as opposed to just attaching the cloth directly to the baffle?
I suppose that you are referring to late ‘67 until early ‘69 on Silver Face Fender amps with drip-edge frames around the grill cloth.I'm curious as to what purpose a grill cloth frame serves in front of the baffle as opposed to just attaching the cloth directly to the baffle?
At some point, Leo started gluing the speaker baffle into the cabinet as it was assembled. The grill and frame were attached with Velcro strips. All of the assembly operations and workers were on time quotas, they had to meet production numbers. Leo never would have added a step if it didn’t somehow save money. The drip edge chrome was just foo foo, which didn’t last long.
It's apparently an attempt to save money by routing a groove in the cabinet with automated machine and permanently gluing in the speaker baffle in the groove. This made things so the worker could simply assemble the cab without a lot of knowledge. More "Lego" like. They went to rabbeted and gun stapled corners on the cabs at the same time to save time of finger jointing the corners.I'm curious as to what purpose a grill cloth frame serves in front of the baffle as opposed to just attaching the cloth directly to the baffle?
Yeah, they used that "new fangled space capsule Velcro" stuff to hold it on too! That and the particle board grill frame were a bad idea.Yup, quicker/cheaper assembly was certainly the reason for the switch. Unfortunately the mdf CBS-Fender used for the grille cloth frame was prone to warpage from moisture exposure, thus why just about every single well-used later silverface era amp you see in a shop seems to have some kind of Salvador Dali thing going on with the grille cloth.
Unfortunately the mdf CBS-Fender used for the grille cloth frame was prone to warpage from moisture exposure