Stuff a tech does..... a tech who has worked on Studio Monitor's before.
I appreciate your technical help.... (which is why I posted in the first place) but what is with the little jabs you always need to throw in at the end?
"You know, stuff a tech does"
Lt. Bob is right, and I DO have friends on the BBS.
I'm just sick of these types who seem to troll around just to wail on someone, or to sooth their own damaged ego's or self image problems.
I highly regret asking for any sort of suggestions for this problem, I was hoping someone else had had a similar problem and knew of a fuse to change or a quick fix. I was also hoping to find out roughly what this was going to cost. Instead, some little men dropped by too toss out some little comments here and there, directed towards me being a techncian, or towards the fact that all the Roland equipment I've spent thousands on, has turned out to be lame.
This thread is completely pathetic now.
I am sorry I asked for any kind of advice.
Why my credentials as a technician keep getting jabbed at with little comments from little people is beyond me.
Oh well, according to my general ledger - I am a damn good technician / sales person.
(If PC's start shipping with tweeter's installed in them - I could be in serious trouble)
Hopefully this awful thread dies soon, and thanks for nothing to those who suck.
You certainly are a whiney one, aren't you?
Maybe- throw a meter on it to make sure the tweeter's actually blown? If the woofer is distorting, gently press on it to see if it's rubbing. I usually check that first, cause there's an active crossover and two amps in there too, lots of places for stuff to go wrong, might as well get the easy stuff out of the way first. Check for anything obvious visually disconnected or burnt. Throw a dummy load on the thing and check the output of the amps and crossover.
You know, stuff a tech does.