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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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I picked up a pair of pre-historic german speakers at a garage sale,
and they have 5 ohms written on the back. How do I hook them up to a 1980 receiver? Also, the wires have some strange plug at the end, one blade is larger than the other one. How does that relate to the normal red/white scenario? Jeez, I`m picking up lots of old audio stuff and I don`t even know the basics. And still, I`m bringing home stuff every week, it`s like a disease. thanks |
#2
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On 29 Jun 2006 13:30:20 -0700, "punkinaro" wrote:
I picked up a pair of pre-historic german speakers at a garage sale, and they have 5 ohms written on the back. How do I hook them up to a 1980 receiver? Attach them to the speaker outputs. :-) Also, the wires have some strange plug at the end, one blade is larger than the other one. How does that relate to the normal red/white scenario? Possibly a DIN speaker plug. Take it off and substitute whatever your amplifier needs. Maybe bare wire. As long as larger blade goes to the same side of each amp. output, it doesn't matter which. In the unlikely event of your ears shouting "Hey! The absolute phase is WRONG!" try the other way. But they won't :-) |
#3
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![]() In the unlikely event of your ears shouting "Hey! The absolute phase is WRONG!" try the other way. But they won't :-) Whahaha! ![]() grt |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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![]() Gert Wiersema wrote: In the unlikely event of your ears shouting "Hey! The absolute phase is WRONG!" try the other way. But they won't :-) Whahaha! ![]() ahahahah ( that`s me pretending to understand) what`s the absolute phase? |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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"punkinaro" writes:
I picked up a pair of pre-historic german speakers at a garage sale, and they have 5 ohms written on the back. How do I hook them up to a 1980 receiver? If that receiver can handle speaker impedances down to 4 ohms (usually listed on that era 4-8 ohms speakers), then just attach them to the amplifier speaker outputs. Also, the wires have some strange plug at the end, one blade is larger than the other one. How does that relate to the normal red/white scenario? If you have that DIN speaker connector like this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Spkrdinplug.jpg Then the pinout is this: The larger blade is minus side (white on your red/white color code). And the smaller blade is plus side (red on your red/white system). Jeez, I`m picking up lots of old audio stuff and I don`t even know the basics. And still, I`m bringing home stuff every week, it`s like a disease. thanks -- Tomi Engdahl (http://www.iki.fi/then/) Take a look at my electronics web links and documents at http://www.epanorama.net/ |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.tech
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punkinaro wrote:
Gert Wiersema wrote: In the unlikely event of your ears shouting "Hey! The absolute phase is WRONG!" try the other way. But they won't :-) Whahaha! ![]() ahahahah ( that`s me pretending to understand) what`s the absolute phase? A positive voltage on the red amplifier output should make the speaker move forward. A negative voltage should make the speaker move backwards. If this is what's going on, the absolute phase (polarity) is correct. If a positive voltage makes the speaker move backwards, the absolute phase is reversed. You probably won't be able to hear the difference as long as both speakers are wired the same way. But if one moves forward while the other moves backward, the stereo image will sound weird and indistinct. //Walt |
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