Any tricks to remove drivers from a (sticky) cabinet


im trying to remove my drivers but they’re still sticking  on cabinet even all screws were off. Tricks, help?
My Sonus Faber has leatherette covered the front baffle…

128x128nasaman

Install a pneumatic valve on the rear of the cabinet.  Pressurize the cabinets to 35 psi.  Grab some popcorn and enjoy the show.

non-sealed cabinets will require a little extra creativity.  Duluth Trading Company briefs stuffed in openings seem to provide the “correct” balance of mass and density.

 

or, just turn them upside down and shake them.

The show will see would be the driver cones popping off the speaker frame.  It is fairly easy to use the screw method with vise grips an a piece of wood as a fulcrum, and there is very little chance of damage if you have someone to hold the wood in place.  

@larryi 

This was my attempt at humor.  Guess some people are better at telling jokes than others.

I'm an experienced builder/servicer involved in performance upgrades.  Yes, working with the holes in the frame does lower the drama and incident of involuntary speaker cone and/or cabinet modifications vs prying on the outside of the frame.  Engaging a couple of threads on a bolt/screw seems to do the trick -- every time.  

Thanks for the instructional video. 

I know you were kidding.  I did like the idea, but, I just thought it was an opportunity to again push the safest way to do this.  I saw the result of an "accident" at a dealership where the driver was being pulled from a $30,000 pair of speakers and the front panel was gouged (a speaker without a grill cloth).  The result meant ordering a new pair for the customer.  

+1 for Mitch2. Being a long time Alon,Nola owner, I've pulled many of their drivers and the only safe way to do it is with a jacking screw as described. Prying a driver out is only asking for trouble/damage to the cabinet and/or driver.