Magnet size is not a factor, the only factor is the "impedance" of the speaker voice coil, and that is very uncritical also, unless you are driving it with a super high power BOOM box of the type used in the high school kid's Honda Civics with the chrome wheels and the 6 inch diameter exhaust tip. Any speaker with an impedance of 4 to 16 ohms will work just fine with your radio - the impedance is on the box it came in, and is probably either 4 or 8 ohms. The only thing that will bother the radio is a dead short on the speaker wires, or running it with no speaker at all. The output circuit is a single ended power transistor - it isn't particularly fussy or delicate as long as the power polarity isn't reversed, and the output is not shorted to ground. Magnet size on a speaker is the new "horsepower" race amongst the speaker vendors - they all claim to have a bigger magnet than the next guy. The size of the magnet is not the important factor, but the uniformity of field strength over the voice coil motion range is, and larger magnets tend to do a better job there. However, the older speakers used pure metal magnet, while the new ones are ceramic - which have to be bigger to produce the same flux in the gap. More flux makes for a better energy conversion from current in the voice coil to sound level (read "louder music at the same volume setting"). The marketing guys turned this larger magnet situation into a whiz-bang new hype. Ignore it. All you care about on a speaker is the cone resonance, the maximum power handling capacity (only if you are driving it with a monster amp), the frequency range, and the harmonic distortion. None of these are important for a car radio from the 60's, believe me! My 67 convertible also tends to favor the front speaker with the balance control set in the middle, especially with the top down. However, I have had people tell me the rear speaker is too loud when the top is up and there are people in the back seat, so I have to re-adjust the balance control. I think the front windshield/dashboard creates a projection device that helps the radio volume for the front seat passengers. I guess that is why they have a balance control - I get the same complaints in my Limousine (the 47 Packard). Dick Benjamin (I never played one on TV, but I used to be an injunear) ----- Original Message ----- From: <DONALDDICKINSOND@xxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Saturday, April 03, 2004 6:34 AM Subject: IML: 67 Imperial Rear speaker > Very interesting discussion of front speaker replacement/repair for 67 > imperial. Let me ask the experts on the rear seat speaker for my 67 convertible. > The rear. as opposed to the front, was a standard size which I picked up at > Radio shack, my questions: > > 1) How am I sure the speaker is connected correctly (polarity)? > > 2) I did not get a "small magnet" but the radio seems to drive it OK (except > front to back balance favors the front speaker) what is risk of driving the > larger mag? > > > Don Dickinson > Prospect, KY > > 1955 Imperial Newport, Canyon Tan and Desert Sand > 1967 Imperial Custom Convertible, Ivory and Burgundy >