Hopefully they fused the input to account for that :/. Take the speaker apart and post photos of the PCB, especially around the input. Look for anything that looks like a fuse or has a mark that starts in F to quickly find it. Once you find it, test the fuse with a multimeter and if it doesn't beep replacing the fuse will likely bring the speaker back to life. It may be soldered so be prepared for that.
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Hopefully they fused the input to account for that :/. Take the speaker apart and post photos of the PCB, especially around the input. Look for anything that looks like a fuse or has a mark that starts in F to quickly find it, even 0 ohm resistors in the vicinity as a lot of companies use them as cheap fuses.
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Once you find it, test the fuses and resistors (especially 0 ohms used as a fuse) with a multimeter and if it doesn't beep replacing the fuse will likely bring the speaker back to life. It may be soldered so be prepared for that.
Hopefully they fused the input to account for that :/. Take the speaker apart and post photos of the PCB, especially around the input. Look for anything that looks like a fuse or has a mark that starts in F to quickly find it. Once you find it, test the fuse with a multimeter and if it doesn't beep replacing the fuse will likely bring the speaker back to life. It may be soldered so be prepared for that.