ops: Hello everyone,
As you can see, this is my first post. I've been lurking here for many years, and have a little experience in speaker building. I was finally working on/finishing up my center channel speaker, its one of the Focal Kits from Zalytron offered several years ago. After I finished my Focal mains and surrounds a while back, my nephew decided to push in two of my dust caps on my main speakers. They are the MTMWW with the 7 inch polykevlar series. I thought while I was being productive this weekend, I'd use a technique that I read about here for fixing pushed in dust caps. Well I tried the vacum method, and much to my dismay ops: :M , the vacum had more power than I thought and sucked the dust cap up the hose. I've retrieved the dust cap and hope I can reattach it. Can anyone give me any guidance on what to use so not to degrade the sound any? Or does it matter? Thanks for your help. What a bummer topic to start out my posting
As you can see, this is my first post. I've been lurking here for many years, and have a little experience in speaker building. I was finally working on/finishing up my center channel speaker, its one of the Focal Kits from Zalytron offered several years ago. After I finished my Focal mains and surrounds a while back, my nephew decided to push in two of my dust caps on my main speakers. They are the MTMWW with the 7 inch polykevlar series. I thought while I was being productive this weekend, I'd use a technique that I read about here for fixing pushed in dust caps. Well I tried the vacum method, and much to my dismay ops: :M , the vacum had more power than I thought and sucked the dust cap up the hose. I've retrieved the dust cap and hope I can reattach it. Can anyone give me any guidance on what to use so not to degrade the sound any? Or does it matter? Thanks for your help. What a bummer topic to start out my posting
Comment