I thought some of you may have wanted to see whats inside these speakers we so desire. I will be using these old Quest panels for project to be announced. I took a few pictures of each stage on the tear down. I know its gory but it had to be done (They were after all done , So I'm recycling them for another use). Look at the way the panel is made. The Quest panels are not bonded together at the sides at all. Just the tops. The Mylar is wrapped around the back stator over the 3m tape. as with the spars that were NOTHING but mere weatherstrip. 1/4 x1/16. The Mylar was very durable stuff. Some of you have been wondering about the puncture test. I did that and it takes a fairly sharp object to pierce through it.
One amazing feat is the heat resistance of the stuff. Look at the pic of me holding a 1800watt commercial hair dryer 1 inch away from my leg on HOT high I felt almost NO heat. This stuff has great heat dissipation.
What this tells me is 2 things from what I have seen in the panels.
1 They can stretch and get wrinkled.(humidity, age, shipping damage)
2 The spars loose their adhesion a tiny bit now and then. (age and humidity)
This has been the norm with most panels. The CLS is known to have a buzz every now and then. I have proved the hair dryer works and stops it. What I can conclude is the Mylar has stretched ever so slightly and the adhesive let loose a bit. (on CLS its usually the bottom corners or top corners along the edge of the bass sections) With heat both are corrected at the same time. The Mylar shrinks ever so slightly and the adhesive is heat activated and gets sticky again. This I proved with the one picture of me with the hair drier. I actually stretched the Mylar a bit and heated both the spar and the Mylar and had positive results . Will this take care of all issues. NO but I have used this several times. Both on my CLS and Quests, and other peoples with great success.
You can tell this panel is shot as its covered in heavy dust with dark color to it, When held up to a light you had several dark dots that were from humidity or maybe smoke . Look closely and you can see my initials wiped into one !
One amazing feat is the heat resistance of the stuff. Look at the pic of me holding a 1800watt commercial hair dryer 1 inch away from my leg on HOT high I felt almost NO heat. This stuff has great heat dissipation.
What this tells me is 2 things from what I have seen in the panels.
1 They can stretch and get wrinkled.(humidity, age, shipping damage)
2 The spars loose their adhesion a tiny bit now and then. (age and humidity)
This has been the norm with most panels. The CLS is known to have a buzz every now and then. I have proved the hair dryer works and stops it. What I can conclude is the Mylar has stretched ever so slightly and the adhesive let loose a bit. (on CLS its usually the bottom corners or top corners along the edge of the bass sections) With heat both are corrected at the same time. The Mylar shrinks ever so slightly and the adhesive is heat activated and gets sticky again. This I proved with the one picture of me with the hair drier. I actually stretched the Mylar a bit and heated both the spar and the Mylar and had positive results . Will this take care of all issues. NO but I have used this several times. Both on my CLS and Quests, and other peoples with great success.
You can tell this panel is shot as its covered in heavy dust with dark color to it, When held up to a light you had several dark dots that were from humidity or maybe smoke . Look closely and you can see my initials wiped into one !
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