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The music was playing at what I consider a realistic volume in a modest sized room but not “head banger” territory.
Personally I'm not big fan of the Nerf ball plug as it will put more strain on the glue joint holding the whizzer cone onto the voice coil bobbin due to higher internal pressure, especially with heavy bass. You may have loosened the whizzer cone attachment to the voice coil bobbin. I know the Hoyt Bedford speakers had the Nerf ball option but was unaware the Alnico XRS came with Nerf balls. When I had the Hoyts, I tried plugging the ports with the included Nerf balls and immediately unplugged them as I didn't care for the sound. If bass booms too much I would, if possible, pull the speakers out further from the wall and leave the ports unplugged.
Doggie,I want to echo what everyone else said about getting in touch with Louis. One of my new Super Alnico 6 monitors arrived with a buzzing/rattling noise that developed in one of the speakers. It was initially excited or aggravated by some low bass information, but it got worse and worse. It turns out that FedEx manhandled the box (or so we surmise) and knocked the voice coil out of alignment. If you looked carefully, you could even see on very close inspection that the whizzer cone was slightly off center, i.e., not entirely perpendicular to the main speaker cone. So again, definitely, speak with him and he will tell you what he thinks is going on.
Doggie,There is no music "type" (organ included) that will damage your speakers. You can play deep organ on a pair of micro monitors if you want - the speaker just won't play those low notes because it won't go down that low. Where the damage comes in is if your amp isn't up to the task and it goes into clipping whether not powerful enough or turned up too high - that can damage or cook your voice coils. The Nerf plug problem that I mentioned in an earlier post is a completely different issue and I'm not contradicting myself in this post.Best to talk to Louis.
Rob, if you exceed the designed excursion limits it's very possible to damage a driver. Music containing low frequency information produces more excursion, for example organ music. With ported boxes, it's very easy to damage drivers by playing music containing information below the tuning frequency of the box.
Totally true, and especially in a vented or open baffle cabinet where there is less or no dampening air cushion as in a sealed box.However, in the real world people play all kinds of music on all kinds of speakers for the most part without any issues at all. A speaker that's rated at 50-20,000Hz will have movement on signals below 50Hz, but in most cases not enough to cause over excursion. If our speakers are going to be damaged by signals outside their rating we would have to be almost paranoid about what music we choose for our systems and that's neither fun nor practical. The sure fire way to keep from damaging our drivers is to leave the stereo turned off.
It would be hard to overestimate how great the service is with Louis.