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Just last week I repaired a loose baffle board on two EAW JF560z's. It was only glued across one section (added support for the horn meant there was more going on up top) and evidently over time it broke partially loose. The defect was hidden behind the grill but I could hear it at some frequencies. I used some special, low viscosity chair-joint repair adhesive that wicks into joints and nailed it back together as a quick repair.Of course better initial construction - using biscuits or other joinery techniques - would have also solved the problem. So too would not moving the speaker repeatedly!Posted via Tapatalk app - lower standards may apply.
Just last week I repaired a loose baffle board on two EAW JF560z's. It was only glued across one section (added support for the horn meant there was more going on up top) and evidently over time it broke partially loose. The defect was hidden behind the grill but I could hear it at some frequencies. I used some special, low viscosity chair-joint repair adhesive that wicks into joints and nailed it back together as a quick repair.
Of course better initial construction - using biscuits or other joinery techniques - would have also solved the problem. So too would not moving the speaker repeatedly!
Posted via Tapatalk app - lower standards may apply.