I have three speakers, which all have such speaker cables (ie those with the 2 wires). Can I connect the 3 boxes all to a laptop? Do I have the banana plug on clinker and then clinker on Aux or can I just banana plug on Aux or do I need the banana plug not at all?
That does not work. For the boxes you need an external amplifier. The laptop is only suitable for operating a headphone. If you connect boxes to this output, it is very likely that the amplifier in the laptop breaks down.
Okay thanks
Can I then connect all 3 speakers to the amplifier and can I connect the laptop to the amplifier?
Whether you can connect 3 boxes depends on the amplifier.
You can connect the amplifier to the laptop.
Three LS make little sense. If then two same as a stereo pair.
Speakers have an impedance of 4-8 ohms, headphones one of 16 to loosely 250 ohms.
Low ohm numbers increase the performance - but the performance also increases the heat output and therefore, even if you get the connection baked, then the amplifier in the laptop will "wear out".
@ Ronnyarmin Thanks for your help, is it really bad if the amplifier is broken on the laptop? Can't I hear music anymore?
I thought the same. But depends on which boxes he uses. Maybe a center or subwoofer and 2 satellites.
You can't hear music through cables. If the laptop has bluetooth, go about it.
Okay thanks for your help.
But amplifier is going to connect with laptop or?
@ 3125b true synonymous right again but I would like to try it out.
So I can't connect the amplifier to the laptop via cable?
For sure. Ideally with HDMI. If the amplifier is not HDMI, but HDMI and converter to RCA.
So also with cable?
Could be possible.
If the D / A converter of your laptop is broken is not. Then you would probably connect via Bluetooth AV Receiver or something in the direction.
See answer 1 over it… Sound over headphone output is much worse.
You need an amplifier for the speakers, because the PC does not provide enough power for speakers.
The AUX input of the amplifier is connected to the line out of the PC via a cable with a 3.5 mm jack plug.
At the amplifier are loudspeaker connections. These are mostly clamps; one red, the other black. Each of these pairs of terminals connects the cable to a box.
Note the polarity. One wire is marked on each speaker cable; either by a different color or she is fluted. For all boxes, connect the marked wire to red, the other to black.
If you have a stereo amplifier, you can only connect two speakers. If the amplifier has four speaker terminals, the second pair is for a second pair of speakers. At the amplifier there's a switch (A / B / A + B), with which the desired loudspeakers can be switched on.
The third box is actually superfluous for stereo playback. With a trick, you can also integrate the third box:
Connect the cable of the third box to the two red terminals. So you win the difference signal between left and right.
Put the third box on the back. This enhances the spatial impression. This is called the Ambiophonie.
Okay thanks
Okay thanks
@Gegsoft Okay Thanks
The 3 box I have to pinch in the red at the 1 box and the 2 box or I got it wrong?
You understood that correctly.
Okay thanks
But then there's a black cable in a red plug in it or?
That gives a surprising sound effect. Will you hear it soon…
Yes, but that's the way it is.
Okay thanks for your help
Your speakers need performance.
Your laptop delivers a music signal
In between you need an amplifier. It has an aux input (or more) for the music signal and several power outputs for the speakers.