Mono (monophonic, or monaural) is sound from a single source. All speakers in a mono system (like an intercom) will carry the same signal. Stereo (stereophonic) is sound from two sources, ideally spaced apart, and reproduces sound the way we hear it naturally, with two ears.
Imagine you are listening to music or sound with headphones.
If the music is 'mono', you will always hear the same thing in each ear.
If the music is 'stereo', you may hear different sounds in each ear, e.g. the Bass Guitar may be louder in your left ear than in the right, and the drums might be louder in the right.
In real life, your left and right ears hear slightly different sounds, and that's how your brain knows how far away the sound is, and what direction it's coming from. If radio can duplicate that difference through a pair of left and right speakers, you can close your eyes and see where the guitar is, and how far back it is on the stage. Stereo radio and recordings are capable of feeding completely different programs out of the left and right speakers; both programs come to you over the same station, or off the same CD track. The electronic scheme used to do that is very interesting.
Its the same thing !
the difference between a mono block and stereo amp is this: a stereo amp sees half of ohms you give it ( that is if you are trying to bridge it), the mono block see whatever ohm load you give it.
Mono Vs Stereo was created in 2003.
Mono
mono
Stereo
What part is required to connect a mono amp to a factory stereo
The internal mics are always on. The external mic can be mono or stereo.
Mono is a type of sound on a set of speakers. There are two, mono and stereo. Stereo is the opposite of mono, so say a person is speaking on the right side of the screen. In stereo, the speaker's voice comes from the right speaker. In mono, though, the speaker's voice comes out of both speakers. Most people prefer stereo because it makes the experience more realistic.
There is no frequency of mono. Mono is a one channel signal, stereo is a two channel signal.
A four letter antonym for stereo is: mono.
Most TV programs are now transmitted in stereo. If not, the TV will switch to a mono signal. Since you didn't say whether it was displaying stereo or mono on the screen while you're watching or if it's a choice in the TV's set-up menu, I can't say much. If you're watching, it's just letting you know if it's in stereo or mono. If you're setting up the TV, it's asking your preference. Do you want your sound in stereo or mono?
Tu Madre