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Hook your speakers up to the amp.
There is an amp only if equiped with factory infinity stereo with 7 speakers. If so, the amp is behind the glovebox.
Sure, If you mean your stereo has 4 ohm output and using 16 ohm speakers. The volume will be reduced somewhat by doing this, but it won't harm the stereo. If you have 4 ohm speakers and stereo is designed for 16 ohms you can do it ,but the amp will run hot and you may suffer damage at high volume to the amp.
Regular passive (non-amplified) speakers will need to be connected to a power amp (an old stereo receiver can do this). Connect the line out of the computer to the aux or tape in of the receiver, and then connect speaker cables from the receiver to each of the speakers.
Take the rcas from the amp and connect it to the + and - posts on one of your speakers.
Bose speakers designed for home theater / home stereo applications can be powered by any stereo or surround receiver with sufficient power output for the ratings of the speakers. Bose speakers for car stereo applications must be powered by Bose amplifiers, since they have a special super-low impedence design which is not used by other manufacturers. Bose speakers for MP3 players have their own amplifier built into the speakers.
The amplifiers are on the infinity speakers. Each speaker has its own amp.
You need some vinyl to go with your turntable.After that you just need an amp(or receiver) and some speakers.
Yes, but I don't know how specifically. You need to know the wattage load that the car stereo can hold first to be sure the speakers can handle the power. Check the manual for the stereo specs and check the amp outage specs. After that, I'd ask an electronics store for any tips they have. Remember to be safe, you can get shocked if you rewire it wrong. Disconnect the battery first. Also, use wiring caps to connect the wires if there is no clear plug-in system. Good luck.
yes , you need the converter from high to low, found at walmart, connect to speakers, if have factory amp install before the amp
The easiest way is a Line Out Converter. you either splice off the rear speakers or if it was equipped with subwoofer then you can splice into that line. The Line Out Converter just gives you a set of RCAs and then you just hook it all up like normal.
Ohms is a measurement of resistance between the amp and speakers. Most home audio is 8 ohm, if you run 4 or 6 ohm speakers you cut resistance down and get more power out of the amp. Say your stereo is 100X2 @ 8ohm, if you use 4 ohm speakers you should get 50% more power BUT the amp is working twice as hard and can burn up.