So I was doing some testing and accidentally played a short sweep tone, very loudly, through my active studio monitors . They were turned up really loud so it was kind of ear piercing and I could hear some distortion, and then the speakers shut themselves off and I haven't been able to turn them back on. The little LED that's supposed to light up when they're on won't light up, and there's no sound.
Based on this (very limited) information, do you guys think that they can be repaired, or that they're done for? I found some information online that tweeters can easily be fried using a sweep tone, but based on the symptoms this doesn't seem to be the case - the speakers just won't turn on at all, it looks more like some kind of fuse or protective element got blown out instead of the speakers and that they just can't be turned on now. The thing is that they turned off very neatly, basically like I turned them off myself, quite frankly it sounded like I accidentally unplugged them with my foot or something (I didn't).
Any ideas? I'll definitely take them into the shop first thing, but since you guys were very helpful and knowledgeable in the last thread I posted, I thought I'd ask for your opinion
UPDATE: Alright, so I tested out my satellite speaker (the one without the amp), and it doesn't seem to be blown out. I connected the leads using some alligator clips to my guitar (through a guitar pedal which is boosting the signal) and I can definitely hear it in the speaker. Extremely low volume, but I assume that this is because it's only getting 9 volts instead of the usual 120 which the speaker's amplifier provides. From what I can hear at this level, it seems to work fine, so the fuse is definitely the main suspect.
Based on this (very limited) information, do you guys think that they can be repaired, or that they're done for? I found some information online that tweeters can easily be fried using a sweep tone, but based on the symptoms this doesn't seem to be the case - the speakers just won't turn on at all, it looks more like some kind of fuse or protective element got blown out instead of the speakers and that they just can't be turned on now. The thing is that they turned off very neatly, basically like I turned them off myself, quite frankly it sounded like I accidentally unplugged them with my foot or something (I didn't).
Any ideas? I'll definitely take them into the shop first thing, but since you guys were very helpful and knowledgeable in the last thread I posted, I thought I'd ask for your opinion
UPDATE: Alright, so I tested out my satellite speaker (the one without the amp), and it doesn't seem to be blown out. I connected the leads using some alligator clips to my guitar (through a guitar pedal which is boosting the signal) and I can definitely hear it in the speaker. Extremely low volume, but I assume that this is because it's only getting 9 volts instead of the usual 120 which the speaker's amplifier provides. From what I can hear at this level, it seems to work fine, so the fuse is definitely the main suspect.
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