Trouble finding spare capacitors

The ones I linked are radial. You want axial.

In reality, you are going to find radial. It's really not difficult to extent the leads. Infact, I'd cut the old one out at the capacitor and solder the new one to the leads of the old one.
 
Yeah sorry, I meant axial. I found the axial ones that I needed anyway.

This is the circuit that I think is in the speakers, quite possibly horribly wrong though, haha

The only info that are on the resistors is 5W1R5K, could anyone let me know how you determine the resistance of them from that?

Thanks again

Crossover.PNG
 
My interest and speciality is audio filters. I know quite a lot about speaker drivers too. I have no real resources for cabinet building. Prefer to buy a second-hand pair and fix them:

https://www.diyaudio.com/community/threads/restoring-monitor-audio-r300-bookshelf-speakers.203461/

You really should be fixing these things. I really don't know why you are so confident the capacitors have blown. I see no sign of measuring having gone on here.

Do they work in any fashion, or are they totally dead? Which part of the audio spectrum is going wrong? Bass or top end? This is basic troubleshooting.

Rough idea how your speakers work. Ignore inaccuracies in my guesswork:

S7 Wharfedale DX2 FR.JPG
 
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This is why I’m confident the capacitor has blown, haha
D0998F47-AB98-4B35-ABED-DB6E37965B1B.jpeg


I haven’t had time to check the other components in the circuit yet, I’ll find some time over the Easter weekend.

I do want to fix them, as I’ve already got some Wharfedale diamond 220’s and 210’s in a home cinema set up and love them.

Just gaining some knowledge on how the circuits work to be able to fix them myself.
 
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That looks like there was a problem with the amp that put DC into the speaker. Hook the woofer directly to the speaker wire and see if it still plays. It might be fried so before you spend money check it. If you have a meter check the tweeter for a shorted or open voice coil. It should measure between 3 and 6 ohms depending on the impedance of the tweeter. Does the woofer rub if you try to gently move the cone?
 
I have never seen the electrolytic capacitor "pop" in a crossover network like this one. This electrolytic capacitor is not a good quality capacitor. Replace them all with the better quality ones like Elna or Mundorf 100Vdc if you like to keep the speakers.
 
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Unfortunately the woofer on one set has blown. Everything else in the circuit (except for the blown capacitor) seems to test fine.

Should I replace the woofer with the original Wharfedale one, or would you guys recommend an upgrade?

F16A9FEF-790E-46C4-9599-138707AEC1E9.jpeg