Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Had to replace our tabletop stereo system as the old one no longer
recognized CDs. We bought a one piece Panasonic unit incorporating CD changer, cassette and radio with two speakers. Our setup is this: Stereo lives in dining room with speaker pairs in dining room and kitchen. Stereo speaker output goes to a speaker switching box so we can select DR, kitchen, or both. Neat, helpful when entertaining, and keeps us from having to blast one room to hear in the next room. The rub: This new Panasonic stereo has four(!) wires per channel, a low freq. pair and a high freq. pair. The speakers sound remarkably good, far superior to the old system, but I don't know how to hook up the switch box. My kitchen speakers are not designed to accept high and low inputs so sending in one or the other will provide a somewhat unbalanced result. Any ideas on how to recombine the high and low outputs into a single pair for the kitchen speakers? There are no other outputs on this system except the headphone jack. |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Thor" wrote in message oups.com... Had to replace our tabletop stereo system as the old one no longer recognized CDs. We bought a one piece Panasonic unit incorporating CD changer, cassette and radio with two speakers. Our setup is this: Stereo lives in dining room with speaker pairs in dining room and kitchen. Stereo speaker output goes to a speaker switching box so we can select DR, kitchen, or both. Neat, helpful when entertaining, and keeps us from having to blast one room to hear in the next room. The rub: This new Panasonic stereo has four(!) wires per channel, a low freq. pair and a high freq. pair. The speakers sound remarkably good, far superior to the old system, but I don't know how to hook up the switch box. My kitchen speakers are not designed to accept high and low inputs so sending in one or the other will provide a somewhat unbalanced result. Any ideas on how to recombine the high and low outputs into a single pair for the kitchen speakers? There are no other outputs on this system except the headphone jack. Interesting. There are two possibilities. 1. The Panasonic has separate amplifiers for low and high frequencies. 2. The Panasonic has a passive crossover at the output of each amplifier channel. Case 1: If you connect the two pairs of wires, you'll damage the output amplifier in an expensive way. Case 2: If you connect the two pairs of wires, you might damage the output amplifier in an expensive way. The service manual would have a schematic that could be intepreted by many of us. |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Thor" wrote in message oups.com... Had to replace our tabletop stereo system as the old one no longer recognized CDs. We bought a one piece Panasonic unit incorporating CD changer, cassette and radio with two speakers. Our setup is this: Stereo lives in dining room with speaker pairs in dining room and kitchen. Stereo speaker output goes to a speaker switching box so we can select DR, kitchen, or both. Neat, helpful when entertaining, and keeps us from having to blast one room to hear in the next room. The rub: This new Panasonic stereo has four(!) wires per channel, a low freq. pair and a high freq. pair. The speakers sound remarkably good, far superior to the old system, but I don't know how to hook up the switch box. My kitchen speakers are not designed to accept high and low inputs so sending in one or the other will provide a somewhat unbalanced result. Any ideas on how to recombine the high and low outputs into a single pair for the kitchen speakers? There are no other outputs on this system except the headphone jack. **There is no way to do it, without seriously damaging the Panasonic. DON'T DO IT! -- Trevor Wilson www.rageaudio.com.au |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Replying to my own post:
The kitchen speakers were some older two way Advents. It turned out to be a simple matter to unplug the Advent drivers from the crossover and run an extra wire pair to each speaker. Put another way, the stereo now functions as the crossover for the Advents. Pending location (or construction) of an 8-in/16-out speaker switch, the kitchen and dining room are bridged together, when one plays both play, everything sounds great. |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.opinion
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 11 Dec 2005 18:58:46 -0800, "Thor" wrote:
Replying to my own post: The kitchen speakers were some older two way Advents. It turned out to be a simple matter to unplug the Advent drivers from the crossover and run an extra wire pair to each speaker. Put another way, the stereo now functions as the crossover for the Advents. Pending location (or construction) of an 8-in/16-out speaker switch, the kitchen and dining room are bridged together, when one plays both play, everything sounds great. Gack! It works but the crossover is not the right one for the Advent. Of course, if it sounds 'great' to you, fine. Kal |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
It's amazing what you can find when you look. | Audio Opinions | |||
Just for Ludovic | Audio Opinions | |||
Note to Trevor | Audio Opinions | |||
Some Recording Techniques | Pro Audio | |||
Doppler Distortion - Fact or Fiction | Pro Audio |