Plug them into the left and right analog audio output jacks. (usually red and white or red and black).
Certainly! All you'll need is a mini-to-mini adapter to insert into your car's receiver.
They were not designed to be used that way so don't do it! Speakers have a much lower impedance than headphones so your MP3 player, DVD player (or whatever device it is that just has headphone sockets) may be damaged if you plug speakers into it. That's because the speakers will try to take much more power from the headphone socket than it may be capable of giving. The correct way to drive a pair of speakers is to use a booster amplifier which has been designed to plug into the headphone sockets and has its own separate source of power from batteries or a mains adaptor. Or just use one of the many "booster boxes" which come complete with an amplifier, neat mini-speakers and sometimes a mains power supply too.
Nope - if your sound is coming from both the headphones and the built-in speakers, it's your headphone socket in the laptop - not the plug that's at fault ! Basically an audio socket is a switch. While no external speakers (ie headphones) are connected, its internal components direct the sound to the computer's built-in speakers. Inserting a plug into the socket breaks the connection to the internal speaker circuitry, and directs the sound to the headphones.
No. VGA is for the monitor. Speakers connect to the audio output using a mini-phone plug. On most machines, both the plug and the jack into which it goes are colored light green.
Yes! there is, this is how, but first, what Audio Output do you have on the record player itself? Is it a single small input plug, or a white and red output plug?
Plug and socket, plug and socket outlet, plug and receptacle or plain plug and outlet all seem to be in common usage in the US. Plug and socket is possibly the only wording commonly used in the UK. [Plug and socket outlet sounds ok to a me, as a Brit, but we never really use that expression in the UK. Plug and outlet or plug and receptacle actually sound very strange!]
Almost all computers - whether desk-top or laptop - are equipped with a 3.5mm headphone or speaker socket. You can buy a set (pair) of speakers that are connected to a single 3.5mm stereo jack-plug - that will plug directly into the speaker socket on the computer. This should give you more sound. See the related link to Amazon - for a selection of what they have to offer (there's LOADS !)
18 mm spark plug socket
No, the plug and socket are incompatible, and even if you changed the plug, the unit would not operate on such alow voltage.
You need an 18 mm spark plug socket.
use the plug with the jump drive socket to play on Windows Media Player
5/8" peanut plug socket