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What is the best polish to use on my khorns?


Cornered

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It depends on the factory finish you have. If it's oiled, boiled linseed oil is what was used at the factory according to Andy (HDBR) who used to work for Klipsch and built many of the heritage speakers in the late 70s. He recommends using it about once a year to keep your speakers lubricated. Others prefer a less sticky product.

If you have a lacquered finish like what I have on my zebrawood Cornwalls, I recommend Murphy's wood soap. Not everyone likes the way it slightly darkens the veneer but I really like results. It made my Corns look new again.

DO NOT use BLO on lacquered speakers! You'll ruin the finish.

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I am a little confused by the term "polish". Check the sticker on the back of the cabinet to get a hint of what the finish might be (Oil, Lacquer, or Raw).

If you have an oil finish then BLO would be the right thing to use for re-oiling the cabinet, but please follow the directions since it take takes more than just a couple of minutes of effort. If you just want to get a bit of shine on the cabinet then furniture polish will suffice. However, please avoid any product with silicone!

If the cabinets were Raw, they may have been refinished at one time. You can determine the finish by seeing what it will dissolve with (talk to someone knowlegible at the hardware store).

Good Luck,

-Tom

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To avoid the "sticky" part of BLO use this mixture:

3: Gum Turpentine

1: BLO

This is the standard "maintenance" treatment for fine woods with oil finish used by those of us who are/were pipe organ builders.

This mixture penetrates instead of laying on the surface to become tacky.

It is VERY aromatic. Pleasantly so. I apply it annually to my K-Horns.

Hope this helps.

DRBILL

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By defintion, BB were made of Birch veneer painted black, but many black Klipsch speakers were actually of Oak veneer, but had grain imperfections or that funny green tint that oak sometimes has and rather than scrap them, Klipsch PAINTED them black. Usually, you can still see some of the Oak graining beneath, as Klipsch usually didn't apply wood filler or primer which would have filled in the rough oak grain pattern.

Michael

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