I did the same thing when I was 2 years old. Mechanical speaker destruction appears to be a typical toddler's favourite spare time occupation. 😀 My father wasn't so happy about it, though. IIRC he used the vacuum method mentioned above and it worked fine.
I did the same thing when I was 2 years old. Mechanical speaker destruction appears to be a typical toddler's favourite spare time occupation. 😀 My father wasn't so happy about it, though. IIRC he used the vacuum method mentioned above and it worked fine.
If that's all you did then it's not so bad.
When I was 1 1/2 to 2 years old I managed to plug one of my dad's speakers directly into the wall outlet, even though it was fitted with banana plugs. What I remember is a loud hum followed by a puff of smoke and a really bad smell.
Follow up thought was 'I guess the music doesn't come directly out of the wall'.
David.
A dented driver really does not affect the sound that much. It is actually said to be the worse problem, because we feel that it makes our speaker bad and not what it could be. Whatever you do do not cut the speaker to un-dent it that would affect the sound and not in a good way.
A dented driver really does not affect the sound that much. It is actually said to be the worse problem, because we feel that it makes our speaker bad and not what it could be. Whatever you do do not cut the speaker to un-dent it that would affect the sound and not in a good way.
Not really, you're pretty far off base here. The FF85k relies upon the dustcap to act as a dome tweeter. And a proper "pin" repair can be much better than leaving the dent in place.
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