Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Hooking a portable record player to quality speakers?
I recently got a portable record player (the Numark PT01 Portable Turntable) with a built-in mono speaker that, as you can imagine, doesn't sound very good. It has a 1/8 inch and 1/4 inch headphone jack, and one red and one white RCA line out jack.
I've tried hooking up some computer speakers to the 1/4 inch headphone jack, but it sounds pretty terrible. Is there any way I can connect some pretty nice powered speakers to this without a pre-amp? Do most speakers come with two plugs to hook into the red+white RCA line out jacks? Thanks for any help...! |
#2
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
Hooking a portable record player to quality speakers?
"bigthefig" wrote in message ... I recently got a portable record player (the Numark PT01 Portable Turntable) with a built-in mono speaker that, as you can imagine, doesn't sound very good. It has a 1/8 inch and 1/4 inch headphone jack, and one red and one white RCA line out jack. I've tried hooking up some computer speakers to the 1/4 inch headphone jack, but it sounds pretty terrible. Is there any way I can connect some pretty nice powered speakers to this without a pre-amp? Do most speakers come with two plugs to hook into the red+white RCA line out jacks? Read the freakin' owner's manual. Those RCA jacks could be one of three different things... 1) magnetic phono level outputs (not likely) 2) line level outputs 3) speaker outputs Take it from there. |
#3
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
Hooking a portable record player to quality speakers?
"bigthefig" wrote ...
I recently got a portable record player (the Numark PT01 Portable Turntable) with a built-in mono speaker that, as you can imagine, doesn't sound very good. It has a 1/8 inch and 1/4 inch headphone jack, and one red and one white RCA line out jack. I've tried hooking up some computer speakers to the 1/4 inch headphone jack, but it sounds pretty terrible. How did you have the volume control on the record player set? The volume control on the speakers? Is there any way I can connect some pretty nice powered speakers to this without a pre-amp? Do most speakers come with two plugs to hook into the red+white RCA line out jacks? Most any powered speakers should work via cables with the appropriate connectors, assuming your red & white RCA jacks are really "Line Out". I suspect that Mr. Lehman missed your explicit description of the RCA jacks as "Line Out". (Or didn't believe it! :-) Numark's website clearly states that they are "Line Out" and apparently intended specifically for connecting to mixers, amplifiers, or powered speakers. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
sorry-- i know next to nothing about this kind of stuff, and i only quickly scanned the owner's manual. it says the RCA jacks are "line level outputs." what next? (thanks) |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
i weirdly didn't see your post when i posted my reply to mr. lehman... the volume control is on the record player set, there was none on the computer speakers. it does explicitly say "line out" right underneath the line jacks. so will it be as simple as connecting them to the record player? that'd be fantastic, as i'm on a really limited budget... |
#6
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
Hooking a portable record player to quality speakers?
"bigthefig" wrote in message ... James Lehman Wrote: Read the freakin' owner's manual. Those RCA jacks could be one of three different things... 1) magnetic phono level outputs (not likely) 2) line level outputs 3) speaker outputs Take it from there. sorry-- i know next to nothing about this kind of stuff, and i only quickly scanned the owner's manual. it says the RCA jacks are "line level outputs." what next? Line out means that the signal from there must be amplified before it can drive speakers. If you want to hook it up to a stereo system or a PA, just connect an RCA cable from there to a "line in" on the stereo or PA. This could be an aux input or a tape monitor (play). Red is the right channel and white is the left channel. Just make sure you match the colors on both ends. The volume on the portable record player should have no effect on the line out, so you would use the volume control on the stereo or PA. |
#7
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
Hooking a portable record player to quality speakers?
"bigthefig" wrote ...
it does explicitly say "line out" right underneath the line jacks. so will it be as simple as connecting them to the record player? that'd be fantastic, as i'm on a really limited budget... It should work fine (or as well as you can expect from whatever the speakers are). Of course actually revealing what the speakers are would significantly increase your odds of getting real answer rather than a shot in the dark. |
#8
Posted to rec.audio.tech
|
|||
|
|||
Hooking a portable record player to quality speakers?
"bigthefig" wrote in message ... sorry-- i know next to nothing about this kind of stuff, and i only quickly scanned the owner's manual. it says the RCA jacks are "line level outputs." what next? Hook those up to the inputs of your powered speakers. You'll need the appropriate cable or adapters of course. But you realize that the sound will only be as good as the weakest link. If these are $10 cheap plastic amplified speakers, don't expect much. Same applies if the record player's built in phono preamp isn't much good. Same goes for the needle and pickup. Jeff -- "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - B. Franklin, Bartlett's Familiar Quotations (1919) |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
rec.audio.car FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (caution, this is HUGE) | Car Audio | |||
Just for Ludovic | Audio Opinions |