"haircut"="hairline fracture"Originally posted by paragon
There must be a "haircut" (?) before it`s broken.
(I think this might be the phrase you were looking for)
David
"haircut"="hairline fracture"Originally posted by paragon
There must be a "haircut" (?) before it`s broken.
(I think this might be the phrase you were looking for)
David
Thanks David and other,
We have a laser welding machine in our factory.
Let see how it works.
The Le 10 A`s are not for a new project now.
May be later. Just want to refoame both.
Eckhard
Seems it works.
Look at the screw hole.
Eckhard
1. Front side
2. Back side
4. Working
5. Working
6. finished and looks good.
:shock:
Wow!!
bo
"Indeed, not!!"
Wish You were here
Gee ,,,
Real Nice Work, Eckhard !
Any chance of it rebreaking if you over-torque a screw/bolt into the hole ?
or is it quite strong ? ( I have a broken le10 basket, just like yours was )
regards <. Earl K
Thanks boys,
Iīm very happy about. Good work from our man on the lasermachine.
Earl, it`s quite strong. Hard work to get the old foam off.
Eckhard
Nifty repair job, Eckhard.
If you donīt know, you can`t see that the basket was broken.
The broken part is on top right of the last pic.
How is the magnet motor fixed to the basket ?
Lets rock !!
Eckhard
From that generation of transducers; usually lightly glued and screwed/bolted into a tapped/threaded top-plate.How is the magnet motor fixed to the basket ?
Since the late 90(s) , this method might have been altered. I had a 2012HPL start to lose/shed it's magnet about 15 months ago. The problem is weight related. The 2012 magnet is about 7 lbs heavier than the 2123 predecessor. The basket/frame is identical. This heavier magnet was glued and only riveted ( aluminum ) to the top plate receptacle/bore-holes ( a bad concept from the get-go to count on aluminum rivets to hold all that "cantilevered" magnet weight ). These little speakers ride around in "foamed" cases.
regards <> Earl K
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