You could try a very strong superglue (not the cheap ones). The other alternative is to melt them back together with a soldering iron. It would however leave a scar, but you could cover it with electrical tape. If you do 'melt'. Use a facemask and protective glasses as the fumes will be bad and have a habit of drifting into the face. Try to do it in a well vented room too! But I must say the results are never a lasting solution for both methods. There's one more alternative! You could take out the speakers and put them in a cheaper case. You would need to find a model that took the same size drivers as yours (measure diameter). After all the sound quality is in the speakers not the plastic case! To get into them, take off the earpad cusion, remove the felt and you should see access screws. Lastly you could contact Skull Candy to see if they have a replacement part, but unless the model is still in production or the part is used on a current model, I don't fancy your chances.
Answers & Comments
You could try a very strong superglue (not the cheap ones). The other alternative is to melt them back together with a soldering iron. It would however leave a scar, but you could cover it with electrical tape. If you do 'melt'. Use a facemask and protective glasses as the fumes will be bad and have a habit of drifting into the face. Try to do it in a well vented room too! But I must say the results are never a lasting solution for both methods.
There's one more alternative! You could take out the speakers and put them in a cheaper case. You would need to find a model that took the same size drivers as yours (measure diameter). After all the sound quality is in the speakers not the plastic case!
To get into them, take off the earpad cusion, remove the felt and you should see access screws.
Lastly you could contact Skull Candy to see if they have a replacement part, but unless the model is still in production or the part is used on a current model, I don't fancy your chances.