A speaker consists of one or more magnets, called voice coils, which are mounted at the narrowest part of a cone(s). The cone may be made of paper, cardboard, or Kevlar. When the amplifier receives a signal, it amplifies it, creating current. The current causes the magnet to move, which distorts the cone. When the magnet relaxes, the cone returns to its original shape, after a few oscillations. The cone moving back and forth compresses the air in front of it, causing a wave to travel away from the cone. That wave is the same frequency as the signal the amplifier received.
Turn up the volume.
Could be the speakers are blown.
The Cambridge Sound Works provide speakers and sound systems. From small speakers to full size home theater speaker systems, they cover virtually everything that anyone would require from a speaker company.
The speakers are powered by the stereo, which in turn the stereo has a fuse. If the stereo works (turns on), but not the speakers, then it may be a wiring issue.
I bought a used 2003 avalanche and the soeakers have no sound. Radio works and has power but no sound. They seem to be connected (speakers) so is there a fuse maybe
Mine has rear mount speakers in the back but off of the cargo area attached to the sides, just to the back sides of the back seat. It works and sounds perfectly.
before replacing the speakers remove one and try it in another location, same for the back, see if a speaker that you know is good works there. it may be the stereo at fault or bad connections.
You go to controll panel on your laptop and go to sound then you go to headphone and speakers( which works for built in speakers)then you go to levels and find the perfect volume. Hope this was easy! :)
The plural possessive of "speakers" is "speakers'."
No. If it works at all, it will be underpowered, and possibly damage the speakers. To power 12V speakers, you have to have an adapter with EXACTLY 12V (no more, no less), and at least 1A. You could hook up a 12V 4A adapter if you wanted to, your speakers would just only draw 1A of power. Make sure you use a 12V adapter though!!
The Gemstone speakers are part of a system that does surround emulation, not true surround sound. There are no rear speakers in these systems, just front speakers with a processor that uses digital processing to fool the ear in believing the sound comes from the side or behind. This only works well with certain source material at certain frequencies. The articulated array speakers feature a moveable driver in order to direct the sound towards the listener, as used in the front speakers, or utilize the technology that Bose developed years ago called Direct Reflecting, where some of the sound comes from a driver, and some of the sound is bounced off of a wall and is indirectly broadcast to the audience. This technology works very well for surround speakers, as it creates a greater sense of envelopment.
How about getting a suitable adapter cable and plugging the other end into a hi fi system and then use headphones and speakers. Alternatively you can try plugging in the headphones halfway. It works apparently.