Noise inside speaker cabinet when moving ?


I recently acquired a pair of LSA 1 Statement speakers at a fair enough price on an audio mart website. We struck the deal , the speakers were shipped to me . I received them and began the process of removing them from the shipping box. Only to see they were put in there upside down , which was a bit odd and unusual to say the least. While in the process of turning both of the speakers right side up , I noticed that each one had a distinctive mechanical movement noise in doing so. Hooked up both speakers to my audio rig stack and they seem to play quite well. Nothing I can hear that might suggest internal damage or broken parts etc inside the speaker cabinet. What could be causing this noise ?. I initially thought , though not an expert on speaker construction by any means, it could be some part of the internal parts righting itself after being turned upside down like that by the seller. Is this a common occurrence for some bookshelf speakers to any degree. Or even speakers in general. Again the speakers sound and work quite fine. It would be one thing if just a single speaker had this issue , if we can call it that, but both of them.

Any ideas as to what could have caused this noise when turning them right side up?

sagur80

Good call. Btw, Walter at Underwood Audio, the LSA people, said same. Can either repair it myself, might just give it a try or some audio repair store could do for not that much. All in all , they sound good in their current state. Still, would be good idea to fix the issues inside the cabinet and just get it over with once and for all. The speakers are ones I was looking for quite some time. No point in trying to return them as they can be fixed quite easily.... appreciate your help and others too who contributed in a genuine and helpful way. 

OP,

Don't get distracted by cause or blame. Right side up, down doesn't make any difference.

Remove the woofer, the crossover parts are usually accessible from there. Some glue dried out, ... or they landed hard along the way. Thankfully no other damage.

And, btw, you do not have to 'fix them' if they are stable when in position and sound terrific. The now loose parts/crossover board have settled somewhere.

I don’t know these speakers, but on many speakers using PCB xovers, nylon zip ties are used to moor the heavy inductors, and hot glue is added to further damp potential movement. If these have point to point wiring and no PCB, then hot glue may be the only thing holding the inductors and that makes them vulnerable to dislodgment in transit. As others have pointed out, it’s an easy fix.  Hot glue guns are affordable. And you can tighten your binding post while you’re in there. 

I had the same thing happen on one of my Von Schweikert VR-1 monitors that I bought many years ago on Audiogon. I heard a rattle in one speaker when moving them. I took it to a local repair guy and it was just something loose within the crossover. It was a quick and cheap fix. I still have the speakers and they always sounded great. The fact that it happened to both of your speakers leads me to believe that it is a manufacturing flaw/weakness in construction that was unmasked by the stress of shipping. As mentioned above, upside down position should have zero effect on the innards of a speaker. 

Glad they sound good. Enjoy them!