RWCearley
Active Member
I need a source for an origional 4x10 speaker or a shop that can restore one. Later types or after market will not fit the dash.
I have personally used that shop on some of my jukebox speakers. They do a great job and quick turnaround.Found a shop in Lafayette IN that will restore my speaker. I tried an after market speaker. The magnet interferes with instrument cluster.
1968 was the first year for a C/D-body stereo/multiplex AM/FM radio. The 1968 Imperial order guide states that the Imperial used 5 speakers. Two in the rear package tray behind the rear seat, one in each lower front corner of the front doors, and 1 in the instrument panel (center). The normal Chryslers had speakers, 1 in the center, two were surface-mounted in the front corners of the upper instrument panel piece, with two in the rear package tray behind the rear seat. 5 speakers total, which was continued until the 1974 model year. In 1974, normal 4 speakers.I don't know how the factory deals with a 4x10 if it also has 2 - 3.5" speakers at the corners of the windshield.
They weren't doing center-channel separation back then.![]()
So what channel is the center speaker in the 3-speaker dash setup, then? Is it a left or right, or does it get a summed L+R?1968 was the first year for a C/D-body stereo/multiplex AM/FM radio. The 1968 Imperial order guide states that the Imperial used 5 speakers. Two in the rear package tray behind the rear seat, one in each lower front corner of the front doors, and 1 in the instrument panel (center). The normal Chryslers had speakers, 1 in the center, two were surface-mounted in the front corners of the upper instrument panel piece, with two in the rear package tray behind the rear seat. 5 speakers total, which was continued until the 1974 model year. In 1974, normal 4 speakers.
As I recall, other 1968 non-Chrysler C-bodies could have AM/Stereo 8-track tape radios which only came with three front speakers, with the 2 rear speakers being optional.
Enjoy!
CBODY67