Yes you can with the converter.Even i have to buy that .
Yes. As long as the speaker impedance is higher than the minimum rating for the amplifier, you are OK.
A jack is a connector socket designed for the insertion of a plug. The plug can connect input, output, or auxiliary devices to the amplifier circuit.
In open loop configuration the gain of the amplifier will be infinite, which in turn produces only square wave output.
If the amplifier is not rated for 4 ohms impedence, you will quickly over-current the amp, burning out components. The power handling of the speaker and power output of the amplifier does not matter in this case. It must be compatible with the impedence load that you are connecting.
Usually output of an amplifier is a voltage ,...but in case of Operational Transconductance Amplifier ,Iout (current ) is the output. This feature, makes it useful for Electronic control of amplifier gain .
If you have a DVD player and just the speakers, no. You will need a system with an amplifier. Some of the Onida systems include this. Connect the digital audio output of the DVD player to the amplifier.
Depends on the output of the amplifier.
At the rear of the receiver there is a single RCA jack (phono socket) that is marked "audio out" and "sub-woofer". This is a mono feed that can be connected to a powered sub bass unit. It will not drive an un-powered bass speaker that does not have an internal amplifier. If the bass speaker is not powered, the audio out from the receiver can be taken to a single channel of another amplifier and the bass speaker then connected to the speaker output of the amplifier.
You can connect both left and right speaker wires to the one speaker but it will not sound very good but it will work.
Speakers are analog devices. There is no cable and connector that will connect a digital audio jack to a speaker without a digital to analog conversion and an amplifier. If the audio output is digital, you will need a compatible amplifier that has the same digital input. Then you will need to link the amplifier to the speaker with exterior grade cable.
In general, you cannot connect a pair of speakers to a computer, because the computer's sound board does not normally include a power amplifier fit to drive a speaker.It might be possible to drive very small speakers with a high impedance directly from a sound board's headphone output, though.Note that most "PC Speakers" can be directly connected to a computer's audio output because the speaker itself contains a power amplifier. Strictly speaking, such a speaker is a combination of a loudspeaker and an amplifier (sometimes also called an active speaker).
An output for an active sub-bass unit is a line level signal, typically around a volt or so. It won't drive a speaker directly so an active sub incorporates and amplifier to drive the loudspeaker. The way to use a passive bass speaker is to take the sub output into another amplifier and use one channel of the amplifier to drive the passive speaker. It's an easy solution if there happens to be a spare amplifier at hand. If it will involve the purchase of a new amplifier, it may prove more cost effective to buy an active sub-bass unit instead. However, passive bass drivers tend to be used in higher quality systems so it might offer a great quality sound with a good amplifier.
A pre out or preamp out is a line level output of the sound that is coming out of the receiver. It is controlled by the volume control, and allows you to connect another external power amplifier to increase the power of the system or allow the connection additional speaker systems,
The capacitor is used to block DC bias from the output, so that only the AC signal is passed. In an audio amplifier, for instance, unwanted DC in the output would cause distortion when fed to a speaker, or could even damage the speaker or amplifier. In the case of interstage capacitors, they block DC so that the output of the first stage does not affect the bias of the second stage.
Any stereo amplifier these days can connect to a speaker from the 1950's. You will just have to connect one side, left or right, to the speaker. You won't get stereo. If your receiver has the option, you should select mono output to combine the signal of both channels. Never connect the left and right speaker leads together to one speaker.
It is a current amplifier. It can be used to boost current in an output stage to a speaker, for example, or for circuit isolation (two of many purposes). If you took a differential amplifier output stage to an 8 ohm speaker, it is very likely you would load the amplifier to the point of making it worthless (it would not amplify).
sound travels from your source, a.k.a. in dash CD player, thru a pre-amplifier (RCA output) and then thru the rca cables that you hook up to the back of your source to the amplifier. If you are not using the pre-amp from the stereo. (RCA outputs) you can use a high level output adapter, which you connect to the speaker leads from the bacck of your source unit. The high level aka speaker level adapter changes your speaker wires on the back of your CD player to RCA outputs. from the high level adapter you then run RCA cables to your amplifier. Some amplifiers have a high level adapter built into them, which does not require the use of an external speaker level adapter, and your speaker wires can run directly into the aftermarket amplifier.