witzendoz
Senior Member
What brand/model are you most likely to find in a respected pro-studio
Yamaha NS10's
Alan.
What brand/model are you most likely to find in a respected pro-studio
Yamaha NS10sWhat brand/model are you most likely to find in a respected pro-studio
I had a pair of those many years ago, in a bigger (and better) room, and I liked themI use an old pair of Behringer Truth b2031s.
I had luck with a hair dryer and some light masking tape and the dented dust cap popped out.
The hair dryer made it soft and the weak tape allowed a light pull to it ...
I thought it was less risk than the vacuum cleaner method, with that I would be more careful. But Ive tried it cautiously.
I believe your's is the safest method
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Ok. Here's one from my 3rd grade science class..
Get a jar with a round opening - maybe a small jelly or preserves jar.. squeaky clean. Place the jar opening over the concave dome to make sure it completely covers the concave area. Now light a match or small piece of paper, drop it in the jar and place the jar opening over the dome before the flame goes out. If the gap between the jar and dome is small enough, the resulting vacuum should pull the dome out.
Sounds crazy, right.. Well, at least it won't have the danger of constant high vacuum from a machine.
I just hope the dome isn't made of guitar pick material.. ever light up a pick?
Hello friend, I recently bought a pair of used M-Audio BX-8 and they came with the speaker dust cap damaged, the seller told that her daughter pushed the caps but with no damage in sound. I don´t know if the sound went bad ´cause of that, but talking about the beauty of the monitors, that´s really ugly with the pushed caps, I´m very afraid to do some repair, but I want my monitor working 100%, I saw in youtube people doing a vacuum cleaner repair in the dust cover, it´s safe for studio monitor? Someone already did these job?