Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Recommended Posts

Posted

Bought a second-hand PJB C8 from Bass Direct (sight unseen). Lovely little thing sonically, and a combo-sized footprint with grown-up performance.

 

Opened the well-packed box, and Poof! A nasty stale smell  (? Tobacco) emerged long before I managed to extricate the cab.

 

I'm hoping it'll diffuse away in time, but otherwise, does anyone have any tips to deodorise a bass cab?

Posted (edited)

Maybe have the driver out - baking soda overnight, then hoover out and put driver back ifcya think the smell has got in to any wadding..

Baking Soda in the box it was shipped in?

Edited by PaulThePlug
Posted

The paper driver cones and acoustic stuffing will have absorbed the fag smoke, so you'll probably have to take them out, let the drivers air for a while and wash and thoroughly dry the stuffing before putting it all back together. Worth trying the baking soda trick in the empty cab at the same time. Just ensure you hoover it all out before re-assembly.

Posted

Not sure if this will make you feel any better, but time and use will help. I bought a wiffy cab from a wiffy house earlier this year. The house was a mixture of years old damp and two extremely wet, smelly border collies who had free roam of the place. I kept the cab in the garage, brought it out for gigs (after some initial cleaning) and fortunately the smell dissipated after a couple of months. Airing out and baking soda work well! 

Posted

I had an old Trace 1119 combo that belonged to a touring band back in the days when smoking was still permitted in pubs, clubs and venues.  That thing used to belch stale B&H fumes from the switch-on thump to the last note played. 

No amount of use and time improved matters. 

 

Thanks for the suggestions,  I'll try airing the little tyke and standing it in the sun (UV and all that) first.  Really don't want to haul 8 drivers out of the box If I don't have to.  Might try a bowl of vinegar in close proximity,  too. That's meant to help. 

If the cab is stuffed or lined with porous material, none but the nuclear option will beef really effective,  though. 

Posted

We used to use an ozone generator in a hotel I work at years ago. It sorta worked to take the tobacco hum out of a non smoking room that had been abused.

 

Ozone would be harsh on some speaker materials, especially foam surrounds. Caution required.

Posted

Back in the days when smoking in pubs was a thing, my old carpet-covered SWR Goliath 4x10’s used to reek of smoke, but I found it dissipated fairly quickly. Funny thing is that despite having never been an active smoker, I now find the smell of tobacco smoke to be “nostalgic”.  

Posted

One of the very few second hand bits of gear I've had was what turned out to be a well smoked Orange SP212 and Roqsolid felt-lined cover. Tried bicarb and various other things but the smell never left it, so it had to leave. Having experienced that, if I found myself in the OP's position it wouldn't matter how good the deal was; I'd be sealing the box back up and telling them to get it collected and refunded.

Posted
34 minutes ago, JPJ said:

Funny thing is that despite having never been an active smoker, I now find the smell of tobacco smoke to be “nostalgic”.  

 

I get that. I've never smoked either, but I think the smell of a pipe being smoked will always be "the smell of a proper pub" in my mind.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...