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Electrostatic repair
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<blockquote data-quote="Scubadude" data-source="post: 955530" data-attributes="member: 17459"><p>Hi all!</p><p></p><p>I picked up a pair of 1971 vintage Stax earspeakers with a fairly common channel imbalance problem. Google tells me "gel screen cleaning" antistatic spray should do the trick but I'm concerned it may contain solvents that could destroy the very thin membranes. Bravick told me DuPont Elvamide is the permacure for Quad ESL loudspeakers. I would rather use a proven solution than a random aerosol. So does anyone have a few grams left over from a Quad restoration project?</p><p></p><p>Thanks!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Scubadude, post: 955530, member: 17459"] Hi all! I picked up a pair of 1971 vintage Stax earspeakers with a fairly common channel imbalance problem. Google tells me "gel screen cleaning" antistatic spray should do the trick but I'm concerned it may contain solvents that could destroy the very thin membranes. Bravick told me DuPont Elvamide is the permacure for Quad ESL loudspeakers. I would rather use a proven solution than a random aerosol. So does anyone have a few grams left over from a Quad restoration project? Thanks! [/QUOTE]
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DIY & Tutorials
DIY For Audio
Electrostatic repair
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