Thanks ShadyJ for the reply. This is the first forum I have joined but I may not be on the right page/site. I need a technical/repair type forum in my case, as opposed to a forum that discusses equipment matching and selection. Do you subscribe to any other forum? I am interested in solving/resolving my dalima because, if I am not mistaken, these things have to be assembled, new at a factory, so there must be a way to re-center the pole piece.
We do have people here who have a lot of experience repairing drivers including myself.
You have a very difficult problem. Attempts to repair this driver will probably fail for multiple reasons.
The driver has been damaged by being dropped.
Magnets are actually usually glued on using loudspeaker magnet glue. The fact that the magnet has shifted means that you can probably break the magnet loose.
Bolt the driver to a large heavy board and clout the magnet with a large heavy impact soft hammer.
If you can't break the magnet loose it is game over, same if it distorts the chassis.
If you break it loose, you will need to make a jig with plastic pipe to realign the magnet and glue it back in place.
Now the next problem is that JL drivers are not built like others and this makes assembly difficult. JL do not provide parts.
Now usually a new cone comes with attached VC, JL audio drivers do not. So you need a VC on the former. There are eBay sellers, how good the products are I don't know. You will need a generic spider of the same dimension with the lead in wires to solder to the VC. The spider will almost certainly change the Thiel/Small parameters, so you won't have the same driver when you are done. So you will have to measure them and recalculate box and port dimensions.
Now you will need to make shims to center the VC in the gap after gluing the spider to the VC with loudspeaker glue. You will need to glue the spider to the chassis with the same glue. Now you need to have a new cone with surround. Again there are eBay sellers. Now you need to glue the cone to the VC collar with loudspeaker glue.
Now glue the surround to the chassis with loudspeaker glue and let the glue cure for at least 24 hours. Hopefully you will not have gap rub.
Now measure the T/S parameter to see if you have a driver that is any good.
Even if you are experienced the chances of a successful repair are not good. If you have not rebuilt a driver before, your chances of success are slim to none. You have nothing to loose so if you want to invest the time and money go ahead.