Tomryan,
I'd also have that Plinius amp checked out thoroughly before putting it back in service. If any of its active deviced failed, it could have been putting out DC to the speakers causing the woofer failure. If you have a voltmeter you could turn the amp on without speakers connected and measure the DC volts at the speaker terminals after giving the amp 5 or so minutes to stabalize. If it's any significant amount, then you'll probably need to send the amp back for service too.
My feeling is that some sort of failure within the electronic chain was responsible for the speaker's failure... You need to isolate that problem before hooking up good speakers.
I'd also have that Plinius amp checked out thoroughly before putting it back in service. If any of its active deviced failed, it could have been putting out DC to the speakers causing the woofer failure. If you have a voltmeter you could turn the amp on without speakers connected and measure the DC volts at the speaker terminals after giving the amp 5 or so minutes to stabalize. If it's any significant amount, then you'll probably need to send the amp back for service too.
My feeling is that some sort of failure within the electronic chain was responsible for the speaker's failure... You need to isolate that problem before hooking up good speakers.