Replacing dead woofer on ProAc Tablette Sig 50 (NYC area)?


I have a pair of ProAc Tablette Signature 50s; one of the woofers is dead. I brought it to a local guy in NYC, who seems knowledgeable but is apparently not some famous high-end guru; he says that the woofer needs to be replaced, but he doesn't have access to one that will fit.

I've messaged ProAc, who haven't replied in a few days, and I'm just trying to get a sense of what my options are. I've always liked these speakers, and I would like them to work, but if it's going to be a years-long effort of finding the right person somewhere in the world to fix these, I'll just have to toss them and find another pair of something. 

Is finding a replacement woofer easier than this guy thinks? Or is there somewhere I should be taking them to in the NYC area who'd be able to fix this? Obviously, I am myself extremely unsavvy, technically, but I'd hope that these are both repairable and worth repairing.

the_jest

Great info on this thread.  Nice research.

Just curious--after reading of these multiple accounts of woofers going bad I am a bit baffled (no pun intended).  Even driven to higher spl's, it seems odd to have woofers fail.  Thinking of how many vintage speakers voice coils have endured half a century of music making.

OP,

even if only one bad: always repair/replace both matching drivers, keep the working old one to use in the future while solving a new problem.

So if you can get a couple woofers shipped from Toronto, who cares if they come from Toronto?

@yogiboy is correct call audioconnect. They are in NJ and are a dealer. 
 

the ProAC site list dealers but in the  US distributor ‘is the sound org’.  I just bought ProAcs - waiting for them to arrive but the service has been great so far. 
 

https://www.soundorg.com

I would take out the dead woofer, look at the brand serial number, and order a replacement - if still available. Otherwise I will match the specs and order another similar pair.