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Is it possible to connect speakers from a laptop to a PC motherboard?
I want to embed speakers from a laptop into a regular PC case, but I don’t know if they will fit
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It is almost useless to the motherboard, since the output from the sound adapter built into it is designed for headphones (resistance 32 or 50 ohms, output power several milliwatts). Sounders from a laptop most likely have a resistance of several ohms and are designed to work from an amplifier, albeit not too powerful. From a normal motherboard, they will be barely audible.
Well, in addition, any sounders require acoustic design (body, damping, etc.), otherwise the oscillating open membrane drives the air only around itself, without spreading the sound more or less far.
bolt on of course not - the connectors are different.
If you build it into the case, then it is probably optimal to pick up the sound from the connector for the front panel
And so - yes, it will. The volume and sound quality depend on how much the amplifier on the motherboard will pull. On the old zvukovuh passive speakers played relatively tolerably, how things are on modern built-in - do not know.
My PC has a built-in stock speaker. I did not find anything in the instructions and do not look now.
I think it might work. Have you already figured out how to implement it?
Solder a regular 3.5mm jack to them, just in case, turn down the volume to a minimum, plug in the audio output and slowly turn up the sound. If you like it, then think about how and where to embed and connect them.
you buy an amplifier scarf on PAM8610 or similar. them in even in our radio stations in bulk.
you collect everything in the right case.
you use.
will sound, the quality is unlikely.
I connected. I took it from an old laptop, they are quite large, 2W 8 Ohm. In principle, audible, but quiet. But when I connected it to a PCI sound system (Creative SB Live! 1024), it worked quite normally and loudly. However, then I came across a scarf with an amplifier from some monitor (there are similar speakers), I made a small amplifier for them, and on some TDA in the same case from an ATX power supply I made a channel for a subwoofer. The result - the sound is more than enough for the room, but at high volume distortion of course. For conferences (zoom, telegram, express) it turned out quite normally, for games and music it is also quite enough.
I'm too lazy to take and attach pictures. But he did, as they say, from what was. But it's more convenient to take some ready-made 2.1 microlab or sven.
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