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#1 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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What kind of lap top?
Can you get the model of the speakers? Poker is right on a lot of laptops yet strangely not all, the head phone jack offers only a bit of power. Most speakers that have an extra power system will be ok. I run a Klipsch 2.1 pro logic THX setup fro my laptop with 0 problems. |
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#2 |
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F.U.B.O.
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I have a Sony Vaio...nothing special. I cannot give a model on the speakers at this time, but they are nothing special either. They used four cords coming from the sound card going to the amp/sub combo, and then to the speakers.
Is there any way I can get decent sound out of the laptop using only what I have available as output (headphone, USB, etc)? |
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#3 |
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1:11
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dosent sound like it Im afraid. The sub is what is powering the sats it sounds like.
__________________
Cigar Asylum: A cigar board birthed without agendas, without profiting, and without advertisements. Amor puro Character is what you do when no one is watching |
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#4 |
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Life is good!
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Altec Lansings usually have a power supply in one speaker and a satellite speaker. The subwoofer has a separate power supply. If the speaker set you are using has a power cord then they will work from the laptop.
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#5 |
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Klugs gave me Gurkas
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Most computer speakers use a standard mini headphone (aka 3.5mm, aka 1/8") jack to get a stereo signal in. The fact you have 4 speakers and a sub puts a slight wrench in the mix but I am betting you still require only stereo input.
Power is not a factor; any amplified computer speaker requires a low level, preout signal. If an amplified or "more power" signal was sent to self powered speakers, horrible distortion could result. My opinion is that they will work just fine; plug them into the headphone jack. If you speakers have volume control on them, set the volume in your operating system pretty low to mid (say 2-25 with the little speaker icon in the system tray if you are using windows) and use the volume controls on the speakers themselves. The more "power" you send in the pre-out, the higher the amount of distortion you will amplify with the computer speakers. Of course your question of "decent sound" is relative.... I would probably use a USB DAC and then send the signal to a passive preamp and a small class T amplifier. Output from the Class T would go to a pair of custom horns each with a single fullrange driver such a a HiVi or TB 3". :-) Hope this helps, -Matt- (Big Flamer and audio nerd) Last edited by OHMatt; 11-11-2008 at 10:16 PM. |
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#6 | |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Quote:
Thanks Matt
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