In article <p1e9cv$23cv$
1...@adenine.netfront.net>,
SpeakerOfMyHouse <SpeakerO...@SpeakerOfMyHouse.COM> wrote:
>The front screen is broken. Screen is the cloth covered pop-on and off
>front speaker cover.
>It is approximately 5/8" thick that runs fully around the speakers.
>This pop-on screen is made of press-wood material and is brittle and
>with a black cloth cover and logo.
>
>Just trying to pop off this screen caused it to break.
>Thin sides, around one inch wide near the 8" speakers.
>Probably dried out.
>
>I have no means to rebuild this thing (two speaker cabinets with same
>problems) and am wondering the best way to fix it.
Honestly, I think that you might find that building a new one is going
to be easier and less frustrating than trying to fix something that is
(1) falling apart, and
(2) probably not made in a way which anticipated it ever being
repaired.
Once that sort of cheap pressboard starts to disintegrate, the problem
will only get worse. My impression is that the glue holding the
particles together starts to fail due to age, humidity, mildew, etc.
In order to really stabilize it you'd have to saturate the material
with a new resin of some sort... and this would almost certainly gunk
up the fabric.
I'd look at building a new set of frames - either out of
better-quality hardboard (e.g. Masonite) or out of flat strips of
decent wood, glued together in the corners. This is not-terribly-
difficult hand-tool work. Then, get some new grill cloth (you can buy
the real stuff from MCM and various speaker supply companies, or find
an open-weave fabric of your liking at a fabric store). Fastening it
onto the frames can be done with adhesives, or (if your frame material
is thick enough) a staple gun with short-legged staples.