that's how i connected my PS3, my PS2 and an 3,5mm jack to plug my phone on the stereo. I tried to connect that over an old AKAI cassette player with vumeters and some cool stuff, but it blew up. I connected all the rca's through a switch and the next step is to add a set of 4 speakers from Cambridge.
Great job man, a simple, "sheep", and easy to follow tutorial on how to add speakers :-) I definitely need to upgrade my "surround" system soon, this definitely provides some inspiration. Also, thanks for the shout out and for wearing my shirt--seems you got it on video before I did :-P Keep up the great work!
@RobH0629 Thanks man! And oh by the way, make the check out to "RichsMethods" for the advertisement:) The shirt fits really well. I might buy more shirts from the same brand, ha.
Nice tip. But when you connected the RCA jacks, you had two RCA plugs, for the factory speakers, and you them for the extra ones aswell. But what did the "Low Frequency" wires go to??
@TheComputerNerd0101 The "low frequency" wires on my stereo are where the Bass sound is produced. The speakers I bought (the secondhand ones) only had high frequency capability. If I would have gotten bigger speakers that have an internal Subwoofer (like my Factory Aiwa speakers), I would have also connected to the low frequency connection. You usually can tell if your speakers have low frequency capability by how many wires are coming from the speakers. Thanks for watching!
that's how i connected my PS3, my PS2 and an 3,5mm jack to plug my phone on the stereo. I tried to connect that over an old AKAI cassette player with vumeters and some cool stuff, but it blew up. I connected all the rca's through a switch and the next step is to add a set of 4 speakers from Cambridge.
jimmytvf 1 month ago
@jimmytvf Very nice. Thanks for watching!
RichsMethods 1 month ago
Great job man, a simple, "sheep", and easy to follow tutorial on how to add speakers :-) I definitely need to upgrade my "surround" system soon, this definitely provides some inspiration. Also, thanks for the shout out and for wearing my shirt--seems you got it on video before I did :-P Keep up the great work!
RobH0629 1 month ago 5
@RobH0629 Thanks man! And oh by the way, make the check out to "RichsMethods" for the advertisement:) The shirt fits really well. I might buy more shirts from the same brand, ha.
RichsMethods 1 month ago
cool
arunabhsarkar1 1 month ago
@arunabhsarkar1 Thanks!
RichsMethods 1 month ago
I dont plan on adding any speaker anywhere, I just like watching your videos o_O
Xerxes02 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@Xerxes02 Hey thanks! Ya sometimes it just good to get ideas.
RichsMethods 1 month ago
Hey! Those are the exact same splitters I bought from Best Buy for my Xbox!
RT2361 1 month ago in playlist Uploaded videos
@RT2361 Nice!
RichsMethods 1 month ago
Nice tip. But when you connected the RCA jacks, you had two RCA plugs, for the factory speakers, and you them for the extra ones aswell. But what did the "Low Frequency" wires go to??
TheComputerNerd0101 1 month ago
@TheComputerNerd0101 The "low frequency" wires on my stereo are where the Bass sound is produced. The speakers I bought (the secondhand ones) only had high frequency capability. If I would have gotten bigger speakers that have an internal Subwoofer (like my Factory Aiwa speakers), I would have also connected to the low frequency connection. You usually can tell if your speakers have low frequency capability by how many wires are coming from the speakers. Thanks for watching!
RichsMethods 1 month ago
niiiiiiiice! =D im going to listen tomusic while im in the shower now =D
enzotje123 1 month ago
@enzotje123 Sweet! Good idea.
RichsMethods 1 month ago
Cool
NightFury94 1 month ago
COOL FAVORITED AND LIKED
Ryan981cp 1 month ago
@Ryan981cp Hey Thanks!!
RichsMethods 1 month ago
@RichsMethods and does your t-shirt say can you solve rob? lol
Ryan981cp 1 month ago
@Ryan981cp yes, it does. It's actually "Can you Solve Rob Cubed" lol.
RichsMethods 1 month ago