SPICA revival and modification


When I just began getting into audio as I hobby, I remember reading about Spica loudspeakers. They were always able to get into Stereophile recommended ratings eventhough they were fairly affordable. Sadly, the company has been shelved after being bought by Parasound, and after having read an interview article with the mastermind of the RIP company, I wonder if these speaker can be bought used and refurbished with new drivers that would also preserve as much of their original sound as possible...The designer said that the Audax drivers used on the Spica Tc-50s, 60s and Angelus are gone, they are no more and that the crossover components may get corrupted. Any experience with these speakers gentlemen? I am very interested in hearing from actual owner with factual stories of what they did with the set ups when they blew up....I remember ST saying that the SPICAs needed to be matched carefully, not with high wattage. PAUL
bemopti123
to stevegolf1...HAHAHA, I also was browsing throught the window display in PARK AVENUE audio and I saw the same pair. That is why I got curious about these speakers and also due to this article in AUDIO ASYLUM. Nevertheless, it seems like no one here is addressing my question, modifications and repairs. PAUL
In a former life I was the national sales manager at Spica and here are some facts for you ... the drivers for both the TC-50 and the Angelus were raw Audax units customized and matched in-house by Spica. All the crossover components were also individually graded and matched in-house. When the crossovers were assembled they were also matched. Although the crossover components showed "10%" they were all individually matched closer than "1%". A "service code" was assigned and that's how we supplied replacement parts and kept the speakers in spec. That's why when hobbyists replaced caps with better(?) grade pieces they found that their speakers sounded really different and always much worse. John Bau was a truly brilliant designer. The TC-50 and Angelus are truly outstanding loudspeakers and offer imaging and transparency rarely achieved at any price BUT they are OLD. Drivers age with time, use, and exposure to the atmosphere. With no replacement drivers available and the fact that a "loose nut in front of the volume knob" can blow anything up you are taking your chances. I don't have any experience with the TC-60, as I left the company before the sellout, but if there are no parts for them the same holds true.
To Bemoptil23: What's the HAHAHA all about? I was just trying to pass along some information that I thought you might find useful.
More information on Spica service codes and driver replacement can e found here on the Spica Speaker Enthusiast site: www.spicaspeakers.com
I loved the Spica's. But you should know that the brilliance of Spica was it's ability to tame the beamy Audax tweeter. Its solution was basicaly to tilt the tweeter up so you were listenig off axis.

I suugest that you can use more modern tweeters.