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Este desmontaje no es una guía de reparación. Para reparar tu Soundfreaq Sound Kick, utiliza nuestros manuales de servicio .

  1. Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Battery: paso 1, imagen 1 de 3 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Battery: paso 1, imagen 2 de 3 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Battery: paso 1, imagen 3 de 3
    • You're going to want to remove the battery first to minimize the risk of frying anything. Unless you actually want to fry something, in which case I would recommend this guide.

    • Locate the battery compartment on the bottom section of the "extension chamber."

    • Remove the four screws and pull out the battery. Now disconnect it!

  2. Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Bottom Screw Cover and Bottom Frame Screws: paso 2, imagen 1 de 3 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Bottom Screw Cover and Bottom Frame Screws: paso 2, imagen 2 de 3 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Bottom Screw Cover and Bottom Frame Screws: paso 2, imagen 3 de 3
    • There's a long thin piece of plastic that covers the bottom 5 screws that hold the Sound Kick frame together. Two clips on the ends and adhesive all the way across keep this piece secure. Just Pry it off!

    • When it's off, the bottom frame screws will be exposed. Grab your trusty Phillips and get to work removing the five screws.

  3. Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Remove Speaker Mesh and Top Frame Screws: paso 3, imagen 1 de 1
    • Warning: more prying ahead. Choose a corner of the mesh and start prying it off. The mesh is "captured" by little pinch points all along the face of the speaker and there are dots of light adhesive for further security. Just go little by little and it will pop off fine.

    • I don't have a picture of the top frame screws, but it's pretty self-explanatory. There are four screws along the top of the frame that were previously hidden beneath the speaker mesh. Remove them.

  4. Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Pull It Apart: paso 4, imagen 1 de 3 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Pull It Apart: paso 4, imagen 2 de 3 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown, Pull It Apart: paso 4, imagen 3 de 3
    • Now you can carefully pull the back frame of the speaker away from the main body. Don't fully separate them before taking care of the electrical connectors on the left, right, and top sides of the speaker. After they're all disconnected, fully separate the back plate from the frame.

  5. Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown: paso 5, imagen 1 de 2 Soundfreaq Sound Kick Teardown: paso 5, imagen 2 de 2
    • You can now pull off the extension chamber (or, more technically, the rear slidey-outey thingy). If you own a Sound Kick, you know exactly what I'm talking about. If you don't own a Sound Kick, why are you reading this guide?! Make sure to disconnect the electrical connector on the back side of the chamber before fully removing it.

    • Note: for reassembly, notice the geared mechanism that keeps the left and right side sliding at the same rate. Make sure to engage each side on the same tooth to maintain an even slide.

    • This is as far as I can take you! Notice the missing magnet on the backside of the left (channel) speaker. It had popped off while tumbling down the stairs. A little CA and it's good as new!

    • Reassemble in reverse order.

michaelbeiler

Miembro Desde 07/19/14

21 Reputación

1 Guía escrita

5 comentarios

Just opened it to fix the small gear that let the back panel slide.... it went broken after a fall. Thank you for this post! It helped me a lot...

elkynhsanabria - Contestar

I am trying to find the 37-301V0 20 Watt 4 ohm 30LY2C speaker for the Sound Platform 2, Model SFQ-06. I bought this over 2 years ago, and one of the speakers has failed. The company will not send me a part and only says to search the web for a replacement. I have had no luck finding it. Any suggestions.

Gary Blandino - Contestar

Great job - thanks for sharing!

Jeff McLellan - Contestar

Thank you very much, your tutorial helped me a lot! A few days ago, I went to turn on my little sound box, and to my surprise, it did not work. I believe it was after a power outage, because I always leave it plugged in. After several attempts to connect it, shake it, among other ways that I will not describe here, nothing, nor a sign that it would work again. So I remembered, I'm going to take it down, and see if I can fix it. But how? Then I typed on Google "Soundkick Soundfreak Repair" and the iFixit page appeared as usual. So, after removing some screws and plastics, my little box started to work again. When I dismounted I heard a small noise of energy from the speakers (zzzzzz), but I continued to dismantle and searching for some burnt capacitor. I did not find anything wrong, and I tried to turn it on, and zap, it all worked again. I’ve reassemble it, and got some crumpled marks on the front grille, but it's working perfectly. Again thank you very much for the step-by-step.

Dalton Miyabara - Contestar

Mine quit after 5(!) years. Not bad for a little sound box. Before it died it had given me signs that it was on it's way out i.e. sound coming in and out (having to shake it). Then it died.

I was lamenting its death because it had the deepest bass of any of my portables. I was actually looking for a replacement when I came across these instructions. I never would have thought I would find them if I looked, so I didn't.

Long story short, mine had the same problem as OP, except it was both magnets. Glued them up and now I'm listening to tunes as I write this.

Thank you Michael.

Rob Breckenridge - Contestar

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