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Technically, yes. However, a headphone jack does not provide a great deal of power, so you would probably need an amplifier for the sound output to actually be audible.
== Each speaker is driven by a pair of wires coming from the amplifier. One wire is "live" and the other wire is "ground". There are two little contacts in the headphone socket which connect the amplifier's live outputs to the headphones when the headphone jack is inserted. When the headphone jack is removed the contacts reconnect the outputs to the speakers. So it's important to connect the "live" side of each of the speaker lines to these switches - not the "ground" wires which should stay connected to the speakers! Because headphones usually have a much higher impedance than speakers the headphones will draw a lot less power from the amplifier but that won't do it any harm so there is no need to add any extra resistors in the leads. == Connect it to one side of the speaker line. You'd better have a resistor in the lead going to the earphone.
I had the same problem, using the headphone socket and a headphone-to-phono cable from Maplins I am now able to listen to my TV through my hi-fi. Just stick the headphone jack in the TV and the red and white phono plugs in your hi-fi.
no i dont think so
Headphones that don't need to be plugged in. No wires = wireless
Because the wires act as a small magnet and so tangle themselves together.
You can connect external speakers on a computer on either the headphone socket or sound output sockets on the sound card. You just need the compatible connectors on the audio wires of the music system speakers to connect to these sockets. - Neeraj Sharma
plug them in
plug them in
Answer why does the person who made a circuit a probably connect the wires to a penny
Wires just connect electricity cords/outlets.
2 wires