The only way the speakers would be locked like that is if they
received a massive sonic jolt--say, 140 db at 60 hz. I've seen
similar things happen to a lot of tweeters, at higher frequencies,
but must confess I've never seen it happen to a sub woofer. It
could be that the poles are reversed on his playback system, which
could "suck" the driver in tight, rather than "blowing" it out.
B
Baerwald
(view)
The only way the speakers would be locked like that is if they
received a massive sonic jolt--say, 140 db at 60 hz. I've seen
similar things happen to a lot of tweeters, at higher frequencies,
but must confess I've never seen it happen to a sub woofer. It
could be that the poles are reversed on his playback system, which
could "suck" the driver in tight, rather than "blowing" it out.
posted 2007.01.02
posted on January 2nd 2007
