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| Car Audio Do you live in your car? Then you need to be able to listen to some high-quality music. |
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#1
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Punctured sub
Well my sub was kinda damaged when someone threw something into my trunk and there are some scratches right on the woofer itself and now the bass sounds distorted.. My friend told me its probly because theres air getting into it now because of the scratches, does that sound right to you? I dont know much about this kinda thing. He also told me something about putting clear nail polish on it over the cracks as a way to fix it have you heard of that before?
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#2
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Re: Punctured sub
My
:I don't know of anything effective to "fix" a sub when its damaged. If that happened to me i'd put a gun to his head and make him replace my sub.
__________________
1998 Chevrolet Blazer LT (95% stock) Pioneer AVH-P7500 DVD receiver 12" Alpine Type-R in a sealed box PIAA Super Plasmas GT-X bulbs PIAA Xtreme White bulbs K & N drop-in filter ![]() "Melo" and "AI". Enough said.
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#3
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Re: Punctured sub
i think i remeber from somewhere to use rubber cement.
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#4
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Re: Punctured sub
2 part epoxy
that is what is used to build the subs
__________________
2 Orion HCCA 10'S 2 AudioPipe 3k's ![]() Adam Whitehead |
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#5
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Re: Punctured sub
epoxy is good for attaching the cone to the basket, rubber cement is a better choice if the cone itself has a scratch or tear in it.
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