Meridian tweeter repair

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ต.ค. 2024
  • Meridian tweeter ferrofluid replacement
    Details about symptoms here
    www.meridianun...
    And images of process here
    www.meridianun...
    Equipment Required.
    1 pack APG L11 900microlitres
    available here for the UK
    www.eBay.co.uk...
    and here for the US
    www.parts-expr...
    several strips of blotting paper or filter paper
    70% isopropyl alcohol
    Small jewelers screwdrivers
    cotton buds
    wooden kebab sticks cut to 3 inch lengths approx or matchsticks of the right dimensions.
    torx screwdriver
    small syringe
    superglue
    Method
    Be aware that any metallic objects such as screwdrivers and screws will be attracted towards the magnet and as such care needs to be taken to avoid damage to the dome. Ensure the area is clean. Ferrofluid is an irritant, if you get any on your hands wash it off immediately.
    Insert a small screwdriver through one of the holes near to the edge of the grill and lever against the surface of the tweeter plastic just enough to lift up the edge of the grill in order that you can insert a slightly larger screwdriver under the edge, now remove the first screwdriver and work around the edge of the grill easing it off as you go.
    Remove the 4 torx screws holding the tweeter together and set them off well to the side away from the magnet. Note the orientation of the terminals relative to the label and if you can mark both sides to ensue it goes back together the same way.
    Separate the plastic assembly from the magnet, if there is resistance use one of the small screwdrivers at the interface between the two halves to loosen them. Place the voice coil assembly dome side down on a flat surface.
    I opted to clean the old ferrofluid from the voice-coil with a cotton bud soaked in IPA however these parts are extremely delicate and easy to deform so it may be that this step was unnecessary. If you are at all unsure then I would omit this step. I did the H1054 tweeter first and found that the H539 voice-coil seemed way more delicate.
    Insert a strip of blotting paper into the magnet gap and run it around to soak up as much old ferrofluid as possible, repeat this step five or six times until the strips are almost clean when they come out.
    Place a very small amount of IPA into the magnet gap being careful not to spill or overfill and leave this for a minute.
    Now repeat the steps with the blotting paper until they come out clean and dry. Set aside of 5 minutes to dry out.
    Fill the gap with ferrofluid to about 75% or until you can just see it, the ferrofluid should run into the gap without having to squeeze it much, if you overfill the gap use blotting paper in the gap to remove some. There was enough ferrofluid to do around 3 tweeters.
    Screw two of the wooden dowels or matchsticks into two of the screw holes in the magnet assembly, they should be a reasonably tight fit as if they are too loose they may result in misalignment of the voice-coil with the gap resulting in potential damage to the voice coil.
    Align the voice-coil assembly with the wooden guides ensuring the orientation is the same as when it was taken apart and ease the two halves of the tweeter together. On my two tweeters there was a tab on the magnet gasket at the same side as the terminals.
    Fit the torx screws.
    Use superglue to refit the grill.
    Test the tweeter. I used a mono signal to my speakers and used the balance on the remote to compare the refurbished tweeter to the undamaged one on the other speaker and could tell no difference in performance between the H1054 that was repaired and the original in the other speaker so absolutely a success there.
    I adjusted the tweeter output on the donor speaker and fitted the H539 and performed the same tests and although the tweeter had improved from before it was still slightly muted at high frequencies so I would not use this tweeter.

ความคิดเห็น • 7

  • @elffloris123
    @elffloris123 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Great video !

  • @jrgq
    @jrgq 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Nice job! I did the same last year and I am really happy with the results.

  • @KingerMetal
    @KingerMetal 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Have same issues with M33 tweeters.
    Madisound (USA Seas) claims : “Usually tweeters continue to work until they don't. I don't know of any Seas ferrofluid that has gone bad. It can get burned, but usually that takes out the tweeter too. Is it happening with both tweeters?
    You might take a tweeter out and play music through it directly at a very low volume, just to see if it is the tweeter that is the problem.
    Since your speaker is active, it could also be an amplifier problem too.”
    It was hard to see when you applied the fluid.
    Did it go in one spot or all around the inside perimeter plz?

    • @stuartwilson7958
      @stuartwilson7958  7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Thanks for your comment, I have added links to a post about this on meridian unplugged in the description along with a method and images of the process. Meridian users and dealers have long documented seas tweeters going soft or becoming muted with age and have advocated ferrofluid replacement or new tweeters, hope the additional images help. The ferrofluid only needs to go in at one point as it self distributes into the gap.

    • @KingerMetal
      @KingerMetal 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Would be cool to have a short before/after video of the sound of tweeter(s) with some music playing for the naysayers.

    • @KingerMetal
      @KingerMetal 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Just curious there are some Seas 25TAFN/QG ‘Aluminum’ dome Tweeters online. ~Which I think was used in the DSP33. *Wonder what they would sound like in place of my [M33] fabric domes?
      I just received my FF from Parts Express. 👍🏻

    • @stuartwilson7958
      @stuartwilson7958  7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      meridian replaced the fabric domes with these in later production
      www.falconacoustics.co.uk/seas-h0623-06-25tafn-qg-tweeter-meridian-dsp420-tweeter.html
      @@KingerMetal