Items required----9 volt battery, or really anything bigger than a AAA battery, speaker wire(couple of feet at the most) First, unplug the speaker terminal from the back of the speaker. Cut the ends of your speaker wire so that you have exposed wire(2 1 ft pieces of wire) on both ends. Wrap bare wire around speaker terminals, both positive and negative sides(doesn't matter which is which), making sure the wires will not fall off. Now take your battery, and touch one wire to the positive side of the battery and one to the negative side(again, it doesnt matter which wire goes where). If you hold the negative side and brush the positive side, or vice versa, you should get some crackling noise out of your speaker. If you don't, the voice coil in your speaker is fried and you need a new one. Hope this helps!!! oh yeah, connect the wire to the terminals on the speaker, not the wiring harness. Pretty simple to figure out, but wanted to clarify. ==Because...== BOTH speakers are dead, I would suggest also checking the fader control on the radio, just to make sure you aren't faded all the way to the front. It that is the case, you could test and replace speakers 'till the cows come home but still wouldn't hear a thing.
Latin speakers became dead.
No one can come back from the dead. In exceptional circumstances someone can revive who has been pronounced clinically dead. However this is extremely rare and is only possible over a very short time frame.
No he is not dead
No, Esperanto is not a dead language. It is estimated that there are anywhere from hundreds of thousands to possibly two million speakers worldwide. Esperanto continues to be used for communication, literature, and cultural exchange among its community of speakers.
I had the same problem - was a 15amp fuse due to a dead short in a back-up light bulb. Simple but fixed my problem.
Dead Center at about 190 Degrees
A dead short to ground or an overloaded circuit.A dead short to ground or an overloaded circuit.
Dead cell, or dead short.
Buried Treasure - short story - was created in 1936.
A dead language is one with no native speakers. Of the three mentioned in this question, only Latin is a dead language: Greek has more than 12 million native speakers, mostly living in Greece. Hebrew has more than 5 million native speakers, mostly living in Israel.
I had this problem. Turns out the connector was knocked off one of the back speakers. Its an all-or-nothing system.
The Dead Man - short story - was created in 1946-11.