Simple repair, no problem. There is no need to replace the strings, they are repairable:
Carefully pull off your stringy speaker grill. Turn the grill upside down (90 degrees) and reattach it to your four speaker plugs. You'll notice a trough or small trench, where all the grill strings are tied and retained. Pull gently up on the loose string, which is surprisingly elastic.
Each string goes through two holes and appears to take up two lines/places when you look at it. Pulling gently on the string will tighten it. After pulling, retie the string now that it's tighter. The knot will be retained in the same trough from where you orginally pulled the string. If you have extra string after pulling it tighter & tieing it, snip the excess gently with a nail clipper or scisssors. The grill strings are tight now & should look new.
As with many directions, this may sound complicated. ut once you look 'em over, it'll make sense. It's easy to retighten these, but does require patience.
Hope this helps.
Carefully pull off your stringy speaker grill. Turn the grill upside down (90 degrees) and reattach it to your four speaker plugs. You'll notice a trough or small trench, where all the grill strings are tied and retained. Pull gently up on the loose string, which is surprisingly elastic.
Each string goes through two holes and appears to take up two lines/places when you look at it. Pulling gently on the string will tighten it. After pulling, retie the string now that it's tighter. The knot will be retained in the same trough from where you orginally pulled the string. If you have extra string after pulling it tighter & tieing it, snip the excess gently with a nail clipper or scisssors. The grill strings are tight now & should look new.
As with many directions, this may sound complicated. ut once you look 'em over, it'll make sense. It's easy to retighten these, but does require patience.
Hope this helps.