My cousin was riding in my car and pointed out to me that my back right speaker just blew and comes in and out and rattles, how would you go about replacing them?
Back speakers just blew - 6G Celicas Forums
if ya do search for speaker replacement sure you'd get a **** load of info,, LOL
But quickie, take out back seat and side pannels to get at em
But quickie, take out back seat and side pannels to get at em
take off the grill
reach your hand in and pull out...also where the panel meets the door you have to pull that off too...
get a screw driver and take it out
one question though
how the f*ck did you blow that speaker?
do you have a amplifier for it??? if you over power it then i could see why it would blow but you would notice the distortion right away as well..
ionno either way
if its coming in and out it just might be a loose connection somewhere
reach your hand in and pull out...also where the panel meets the door you have to pull that off too...
get a screw driver and take it out
one question though
how the f*ck did you blow that speaker?
do you have a amplifier for it??? if you over power it then i could see why it would blow but you would notice the distortion right away as well..
ionno either way
if its coming in and out it just might be a loose connection somewhere
--GT2GT4+Aug 1, 2003 - 6:27 AM
You are more likely to blow a speaker from lack of power rahter than overpower. Usually when you hear distortion it is the amplifier clipping the signal because it can't keep up. This causes the speakers cone to move in an erratic manner usually damaging the voicecoil windings or bottoming out the voicecoil itself.
| QUOTE (GT2GT4 @ Aug 1, 2003 - 6:27 AM) |
| how the f*ck did you blow that speaker? do you have a amplifier for it??? if you over power it then i could see why it would blow but you would notice the distortion right away as well.. |
You are more likely to blow a speaker from lack of power rahter than overpower. Usually when you hear distortion it is the amplifier clipping the signal because it can't keep up. This causes the speakers cone to move in an erratic manner usually damaging the voicecoil windings or bottoming out the voicecoil itself.