rev 10 full of water!!!
I have a set of rev10s, 3 years old,, one cut out yesterday, so today i dug in, checked the resistance and it seems correct 3.4ohms.. but then i noticed it weighed a ton and was sloshing... i opened it up it had like 2 - 3 liters of WATER IN IT???
WTF... ll the screws were tight how is this water getting in... should i contact wetsounds? |
Well....now we know how they got the name.
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Drill a small drain hole in the bottom of the cans?
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do you put your tower down for storage or anything? If water gets into the horn cone, then that's a possible entry point. So it's possible that if the speaker is point up toward the sky for storage or something, that might cause it.
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I agree, with above... Drill hole in bottom...
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This is nothing new with HLCDs or tower speakers in general. With all proaxials (horn tweeter at the center of the midbass driver) there is a very slight gap between the midbass voice coil and horn. The internal spider is porous to aid in cooling. So it is possible that water could get in between this or by some other means. Sitting out in a hard driving rain could do it. Stored while facing up in a rain could do it. But it is not normal for a speaker that is located six feet above the sole of the boat. Rather than drill a drainage hole in the pod, I would first try to figure out how and when water is gaining access and fix that problem.
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Where do you store your boat? As mentioned the horn can allow water in on rainy days with the right wind.
Speakersox or suits are great way to keep them dry , I prefer speakersox |
^^^Yeah, Speakersox are awesome.
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Understand something about enclosures used in an outdoor environment. A totally sealed speaker enclosure, be it a woofer enclosure or a tower enclosure, has a mass of air trapped inside that CHANGES in volume depending on temperature. If there is no opening to the outside world, the cone of the woofer/midbass driver will be pushed outward to its mechanical extreme as the ambient temperature goes up throughout the day. A marine enclosure ideally needs an "engineered leak" as part of its design.
My point is to just add to the discussion that totally sealed is actually bad. FYI Phil Kicker |
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