🎤 Elevate Your Audio Game with Style!
This Speaker Grill Cloth is a 55 x 19.6 inch protective mesh designed to shield your speakers from dust and scratches while enhancing sound quality. Made from a durable, chemical fiber material, it features a 3-layer construction for optimal protection and permeability, ensuring your audio experience remains pristine. Its lightweight and soft texture makes it an ideal choice for both vintage restoration and modern decor.
M**9
Easy to use
Took about 8 minutes to replace the rotten grill cloth on my old amp using a staple gun and scissors. Not the same color or as stiff as the original, but nice looking and hopefully more durable. If it rips, I’ve got enough left to do it again at least twice.
A**I
Good product
Used this to fix up a parcel shelf on a 2004 Toyota Corolla that was falling apart.It's tough to get this looking good when there's no place to tuck the edges, and the photos show some imperfections due to being a little heavy handed with the glue. But once it's in the car it's hard to notice.
S**D
Stretches like a Chinese finger trap!
While I do like the look of the material I can tell you that if you’ve ever stretched a piece of canvas, this material will infuriate you. I allowed what I thought was plenty of material on each edge to cover my speaker grill. I started stretching it like the hundreds of canvases that I have stretched in the past, by stapling it in the middle of all four sides, anticipation it to be able to stretch in every direction, but I quickly realized that if you pull tight from one end to the other, the material is actually biased enough to shrink the opposite sides and become narrowed. I allowed an extra 2" on the sides and by the time I stretched the ends I barely had enough material to wrap the edge of my frame. It gets worse the closer you get to the ends. I had to use a pair of canvas pliers to make it work. My advice: allow way more material than you would normally, especially if you need it taught. Also, if you are a little OCD, don't expect to be able to keep this material's lines straight. Overall I am satisfied with the outcome, but I probably would not use this type of material again.
H**F
Better than most commercial coverings
We installed a larger TV in our RV and I had to build a cabinet front which would have blocked the down firing speakers. I cut two ovals in the front and used this material to cover the holes. It worked great. Its so sheer you can see through it and it passes sound very well. I used tacks and glue to hold it in place. It looks professional and the TV sounds great. The color also blended well with the pecan stain I used.
A**E
2003 Nissan Murano's front speakers get a makeover
The material was thicker than the original speaker material, but it was super easy to work with. Although the old covers were gray/brown I chose this color and it goes really well with my tan interior dash, and upholstery. My car is 18 years old so the speaker covers, as you can imagine, spent a lot of time getting faded and dirty. And a car detailer spilled some dashboard protectant liquid on one of the speaker covers a couple years ago so it had a big ugly spot on it. I tried to locate speaker covers for this car but there were very few and very expensive. So, I decided to DIY it. I popped the clips and slid the speaker covers off (a little tricky as the vent attaches to a tube inside the dash). The old material was easy to remove as it had lost most of its adhesive. I used the old material as a pattern and pinned it to the new cloth and cut out a new piece for each speaker. I then used some adhesive meant for speakers and speaker covers and carefully glued the new pieces to the plastic speaker cover. Once dry, I slid them back into position and snapped them in. Tah-dah! Makeover complete.
B**B
Nice grill cloth--it would be five stars if it was cut square!
I bought this to cover a recently purchased speaker set that has bare speakers (no covers).I like the looks of this grill cloth. But because you can see through it, I had to change how I mounted it, so that everything behind it was black.The biggest downside was that it was not cut square--it was more like a parallelogram than a rectangle. That added time for me to square my cuts.At least the width was cut oversized enough that after making it a rectangle, it was the advertised width.
W**D
Very easy to work with
I re-covered 2 vintage 1972 Advent bookshelf speakers. The material size without cutting is perfect on 3 sides so only had to make 1 cut per speaker. Material is high quality and beige color was good match for the old existing covers. Can see through a little but could on the originals too.
I**H
Transparent to sound waves and light.
This material is different than anything I've used on speakers before. It has a "thick" feel. It's a very nice exterior texture. The only downside is you can easily see right through it - so instead of just seeing a nice, flat surface the wood and drivers can be easily made out. I would have to assume this also means it's acoustically transparent as well (a good thing).Maybe the transparency is because of the light color I chose, as I've always used dark brown or navy blue grille cloth in the past.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
4 days ago