Ok so i was sitting in my living room watching tv, my receiver was turned off
all of a sudden i hear a loud Pop! sound.... like when you throw christmas lights on the ground and they explode
then i hear some buzzing noises, then another Pop! bzz bz pop
so i was like wtf? it sounded like the back of my tv was blowing up
i walk towards it and i notice the ports on my subwoofer smoking!
smells a little like those cap guns with the lil strips of gun powder?
so i unplug the subs amp asap (its plugged into a surge protector btw)
i leave my sub in stand-by mode (thats probably relevant)
i unscrew the amp and take it out (mind u the amp and the sub are not hot)
when i take off the amp A LOT of smoke comes billowing out
Im still not sure where it started but the amp and sub look fine...
still haven't checked em out im waaay too tired but i thought id post this first and get some thoughts anyhow
its a Creative Sounds SD12 Subwoofer and a Elemental Designs LT350 amp
It sounds to me as if somehow, the amp managed to come on and push the DC rail voltage through the sub and fry the voice coil. It makes a lot of smoke when that happens and accounts for the loud pop.
Do not plug anything in. Whatever it is, it is serious and hazardous.
Start checking things by moving the woofer cone in and out and see if you can feel some grating. If you can there is gap rub.
Now connect an ohm meter to the woofer. See if the coil is open circuit, or if the DC coil resistance is below the specified DC resistance of 3.6 ohms.
If there is rub, open circuit or lowered resistance of the voice coil, then the voice coil of the woofer if fried and it will need reconing.
Now the amp. Take the cover of the amp and see if you can see any burnt components, and or blown fuses. If you can the unit needs professional service, or recycling.
If there is no obvious burn inside, take the unit to a competent service technician, and have him start the unit up slowly on a Variac, and watching closely what happens, especially for signs of DC offset.
This is a dangerous situation so do not plug the amp back in without professional assistance.
Unfortunately your story makes me suspicious you have lost the driver and the amp.