My first question would be why you would even consider buying 20 year old
speakers you don't know anything about?
With old Maggies there can be tears in the membrane from wear. And the wires
on the membrane can have gotten loose. At least that's what I think could be
the case. I'm really looking in to Magnepan as I am thinking of buying the
1.6 model. hm, not thinking anymore, just thinking of when the right time
is.
Wenslauw
The speakers are my bosses that he used for his home stereo. About 5
years ago he put them into storage and hasnt used them since. He said
when he put them in storage they were in perfect working condition. So i
do know something about them, sorry, i should have made that apparant. He
said they would be really cheap if I wanted them, provided they arent
damaged, of course. Ill take your advice into consideration though when
examining for damage though, thanks.
"Nicholas Currie Schmuck" <ns0...@mail.rochester.edu> wrote in message
news:bekhl...@enews3.newsguy.com...
My dad had a pair of MG-IIA's he bought in 1979 I believe. It required
two rebuilds--one the late 80s and one in the late 90s (he gave them away
this year to a friend).
IMO, they could fail at any moment given their age, even if they weren't
used much over their lifetime.
--
Jason Kau
http://www.cnd.gatech.edu/~jkau
Hope this helps.
Harry
"Nicholas Currie Schmuck" <ns0...@mail.rochester.edu> wrote in message
news:bekhl...@enews3.newsguy.com...
Maintenance issues, yes there's the potential for that! A fairly handy
owner can perform a surprisingly big rebuild, but it's labor-intensive.
The trick to very quickly determining if something is wrong is to play
some music with heavy bass notes (reggae ought to work fine): If you
hear odd buzzes, that's a sign of loose wires (not to be confused with
the sound of a Maggie bottoming out at high listening levels). And of
course if it REALLY sounds rolled of, it's time to lay down some new
tweeter wires 'cause the aluminum wire used doesn't last forever.