Problem with PMC PRODIGY 1

rayolight

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Jul 21, 2021
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Purchased the Prodigy 1 speakers in February of this year. They have been excellent, doing everything that I wanted them to do ,great soundstage, excellent bass and super mids and highs,so all good.
Switched my system off the other night after about a 3 hour session all fine.
Switched the system on next evening sound sounded flat with no highs,on checking,both tweeters were providing no sound. Visual check and as I hope you can see from enclosed pictures,absolutely no damage . I have 2 amp systems so tried them on other system with exactly the same results . Contacted PMC but they just referred me to distributor as on warranty. My question is has anyone else had any problems with these speakers, I am sure I will get comments that they have been overdriven, can only say not as far as I am aware,smallish room so no need for power. I believe some speakers are fitted with fuses is this a possibility.Can a tweeter be blown without any damage to the cone ,bearing in mind this has happened to both speakers. Due to my location in Spain sending speakers back for repair is a nightmare and if I could confirm what caused the problem would be happy to buy 2 replacements when over in UK for Christmas. Has anyone replaced one of these tweeters, is it easy, looking forward to any constructive comments
Thanks
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rayolight

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Drivers can sometimes just fail, but it'd be extremely unusual for both tweeters to just stop working.
I know that the obvious reason would be that they were overdriven, but they were working fine until I switched them off. Just trying to workout if it's possible that the crossover failed. Is there some safety fuse fitted which failed when system switched on,I know it's highly unlikely, it would happen to both but it has,and no visible signs to cones,I'm perplexed .I would just like to understand what has happened, if I have to pay for new parts,that's fine😟
 

rayolight

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You're really not very lucky with speakers are you Ray?

What were you using until they failed?
Was it flat,with no boosted treble and well within its comfort zone (and sounding like it)?
I'm sure the fingers will be pointing in my direction. On the last night I used them it was with Cambridge audio CXN v2 Streamer, Vincent sv-237mk amp, and SMSL Su9 dac.
Amplifier setting was probably on a setting of 4 as good input signal.I'm a bit of a purist so don't use bass and treble and have the benefit of SVS woofer.
I am beginning to wonder about a remote controlled speaker switcher I use,can this cause a problem when it switches the load.
Feeling disappointed the only speakers I have never had any issues with are my Acoustic energy AE1's and AE500's. Had the AE1'S from new,still superb. My problem now is having to ship it back to distributor, don't have a lot of confidence in them ,so am sure will have to pay ,whatever is found even though on warranty, which is not a problem but doesn't inform me what was the cause, so,making me nervous about listening at any volume 🥴
 

Noddy

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Did you connect the speakers directly to each amp? If I understand correctly, you normally have a switching device between the amp and the speakers.

It sounds like you’ve narrowed it down to the speakers. Surely any switch is just a magnetic relay device, hence it does no more than toggle the current.
 

rayolight

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Did you connect the speakers directly to each amp? If I understand correctly, you normally have a switching device between the amp and the speakers.

It sounds like you’ve narrowed it down to the speakers. Surely any switch is just a magnetic relay device, hence it does no more than toggle the current.
On my Vincent amp there are 2 sets of speakers, PMC Prodigy and Acoustic energy AE500's, these are connected to the amp via a switch box which is remote controlled . Am sure problem is tweeters, but to best of my knowledge haven't driven them hard. The tweeter cones are perfect no damage and I can't see both crossovers going faulty. Your correct the switch box is just an electrical transfer switch, just scratching for answers.
I will try to get in touch with technical at PMC, don't mind paying for new tweeters even though on warranty. I would rather fit them myself if possible, after sales service here in Spain is not great
 
I know that the obvious reason would be that they were overdriven, but they were working fine until I switched them off. Just trying to workout if it's possible that the crossover failed. Is there some safety fuse fitted which failed when system switched on,I know it's highly unlikely, it would happen to both but it has,and no visible signs to cones,I'm perplexed .I would just like to understand what has happened, if I have to pay for new parts,that's fine😟
You mean both crossovers suddenly failed? Very doubtful.
 
I am beginning to wonder about a remote controlled speaker switcher I use,can this cause a problem when it switches the load.
So am I. Some sort of arcing or DC signal would be the reason two tweeters blow simultaneously. To be fair to PMC it doesn’t frankly sound like a manufacturing defect on the face of it. That said, they charge premium prices and probably want to retain goodwill, so might well fix them fre of charge through their local distributor or provide spares for you.

But I’d remove the switching box and see if you can test it, otherwise you’ll soon have two sets with blown tweeters!
 
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Noddy

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So am I. Some sort of arcing or DC signal would be the reason two tweeters blow simultaneously. To be fair to PMC it doesn’t frankly sound like a manufacturing defect on the face of it. That said, they charge premium prices and probably want to retain goodwill, so might well fix them fre of charge through their local distributor or provide spares for you.

But I’d remove the switching box and see if you can test it, otherwise you’ll soon have two sets with blown tweeters!
That was my thought, but where would a large DC or AC signal come from? If a large surge came down the mains lines, due to lightning or an unexpected surge, wouldn’t that fry the entire system?

I would be tempted to examine the switching mechanism, especially if the switching is mains powered, and look for signs of shorting or arcing. But then why would the tweeters blow and not the woofers if a surge went down the speaker cables? Unless the crossover circuits blew, of course.
 
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That was my thought, but where would a large DC or AC signal come from? If a large surge came down the mains lines, due to lightning or an unexpected surge, wouldn’t that fry the entire system?

I would be tempted to examine the switching mechanism, especially if the switching is mains powered, and look for signs of shorting or arcing. But then why would the tweeters blow and not the woofers if a surge went down the speaker cables? Unless the crossover circuits blew, of course.
to be fair the only thing I find odd in this set-up is the use of a remote speaker switch and feel sure this is probably the culprit. Haven't heard of any issues from people using these speakers in a 'normal' set-up.
 

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