HELP - buzzing on Magnepan 3.6R; repair or not?


I was trying to sell my Magnepan 3.6R's which I purchased used from work (along with a pair of ML Odyssey's which I decided to keep. I was demoing them to a prospective buyer last night. I was playing deejay and threw on about 7 or 8 different tracks - chamber music, jazz, orchestral, pop vocal, etc.

I find them bright in my system so I wanted to make sure the prospective buyer understood that so I played a track that demonstrated that explained that to them. I said I didn't know how they rocked though so offered to put something on. I grabbed a White Stripes CD which has some extended bass notes on it. One of the panels started to vibrate/buzz. ARGH! Of course, I didn't know that when I bought them, but I received a decent enough deal from work that I can't complain.

So, I have two avenues I can pursue to sell them - one, sell as is at a steep discount (the prospective buyer is actually still interested in this as an option since he has no other components for his system yet so can wait) or two, repair them myself which would then allow me to market them as having a new panel and at that point I'd also now have boxes to go along with them. Which avenue of sale makes the most sense?

I left a voicemail at Martin Logan service early this morning (8:30AM their time), but did not receive a call back. Does anyone have any idea what it costs to repair this? I'm assuming this is not something that can be field repaired by me.
donato
Are you sure it is the speaker? Perhaps the buzzing is your amp clipping on the loud bass notes.
I used to own Magnepan 3.6rs and I feel there is nothing wrong with your speaker system. Magnepan's frequently "bottom out" or make a slapping sound when playing heavy bass notes with rock and roll or other music at moderatly high levels. This phenomem is also frequency dependent. Most people just live around this problem because the speakers sound so good and refrain from pushing them. Some find it frustrating because first they play so clean it is easy to play them very loudly and not realize how loud they are playing, then you are suddenly rudely reminded by the "slap" sound. Second it is important to use high power, high current amps with a high damping factor to control the panels. The more power the better and some solid state fans use Bryston 7b monoblocks with success. Others like the softer sound of tubes with the high frequencies. A good combo is a tube preamp and solid state amps for the 3.6rs.
Some people advocate using subwoofers in conjunction with the pans but the slapping sound can still occur at high levels unless you use an electronic crossover or a home theater processor to filter out the low bass notes. A problem with this method is trying to find a subwoofer that will blend well with the Maggies which might be getting easier as this technology improves. I would look into the Vandersteen subs or the new Velodyne digital or the Revel B-15s.
I don't know why you'd contact Martin Logan about Maggies maybe you typed in the wrong words in the second paragraph. I'm sure they would tell you to sell the Maggies and keep the Martins.
I have always preferred the Magnepan sound over the Martin Logan sound by a wide margin, because to me, Martin Logan has never successfully integrated their woofer system with their electrostatic panels well.
Magnepan for marketing reasons denies that their speakers need a subwoofer, but they could sell a bunch of dedicated sub panels with the 3.6rs and other models if they developed a system that could incorporate the Tympani bass panels with a special crossover for the audiophile who wants to take this to the limit.
Or, hmm, since Magnepan put Apogee out of business and I believe won the rights to the Apogee technology in the patent lawsuit, why don't they use the Apogee ribbon technology and incorporate this into their speaker systems? I've never heard anyone complain about Apogee bass as long as you had the amps to drive them.

And yes, if your Maggies are in need of repair, they would have to be serviced or adjusted (sometimes the panels can become out of line) by Magnepan.

Also if you are getting "bass slap" beware! You are endangering the ribbon tweeters which seem to blow easily despite being fused. They are user replacable and if not under warranty, I believe sell for around $200-300. They are a pain to replace though.

All previous cautions to the wind, the 3.6r is a wonderful sounding speaker, that do have some limits (The BASS), but what they do well (the mids and high frequencies) is close to are is "state of the art".

If you are a dedicated rock and roll man this may not be the speaker for you.

Hope this info helps,
Steven
Sell them at a deep discount and be done with them. At least the "repair" wouldn't come back to haunt you!
Is it the Maggie buzzing like you state in the title of your thread, or the Logan which you indicate in the last paragraph?
Are you talking about the first track of "Elephant"? If so the buzzing you are hearing is normal, that is how resolving the 3.6s' are I found that magnepan speakers are to revealing to listen to distortion. they play distortion to accurately. Play the same cd in your car and listen closely you will hear the same buzzing sound. Now if yet another cd does the same thing then you have issues. I would suspect that it is something else because if you pushed the speakers to hard the first thing to pop would be the fuse on the tweeter. Try Peter Gabriel's latest release or something else that is Rock but has a clean recording.

I am not saying damage is not possible, I am saying that I think it is unlikely and I have experienced the SAME thing with the SAME disc.