3.5mm To TRS or TS 1/4 inch ???

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3.5mm To TRS or TS 1/4 inch ???
Posted on: 09.02.2013 by Jerica Salava
I am taking one of my powered speakers to a small pool party.

My friends want to be able to play their iPods throughout the day.

Each one of my speakers has a 1/4 inch (TS/TRS) input. I only need one speaker at the party.

If I go TS, I know that the 3.5mm to TS adapter will merge the 3.5mm STEREO (Left/Right) signal into a TS cable MONO signal. All should be fine.

But if I have a STEREO 3.5mm to TRS adapter, what happens to the Left/ Right channels?

Will the speaker be looking for a balanced signal path and ignore one of the STEREO channels?

Therefore not getting both Left and Right audio signals to the output audio?

Thanks.

>
Jerica Salava
10.02.2013
Originally Posted by Shishdisma
Settings -> General -> Accessibility -> Mono Audio -> On

Took me 5 seconds to get to it, then run a 3.5mm -> 1/4" jack into the speaker. If you use a Y splitter as a passive summing box, you WILL fry your input, as that Rane note says.
Thanks for that iPod mono trick. That will work.

>
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
Originally Posted by loverocket
Looks like the safe answer would be to take both speakers and a Stereo Y Adapter 3.5mm to dual RCA to 1/4 inch TS.

>
I'll be doing this for FREE ^
Layne Koop
09.02.2013
Originally Posted by loverocket
Looks like the safe answer would be to take both speakers and a Stereo Y Adapter 3.5mm to dual RCA to 1/4 inch TS.
EDIT: I mis-understood your intent. So I am getting rid of my own posting of the Rane 109 tech note. The rest still applies.

Get this, or the equivalent. Plug your stereo source into channels 7 & 9, and pan both of those channels hard left. Then use the left output on the master and run that to the speaker.

http://www.amazon.com/Yamaha-MG102C-.../dp/B000Z7C9T8
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
I am taking one of my powered speakers to a small pool party.

My friends want to be able to play their iPods throughout the day.

Each one of my speakers has a 1/4 inch (TS/TRS) input. I only need one speaker at the party.

If I go TS, I know that the 3.5mm to TS adapter will merge the 3.5mm STEREO (Left/Right) signal into a TS cable MONO signal. All should be fine.

But if I have a STEREO 3.5mm to TRS adapter, what happens to the Left/ Right channels?

Will the speaker be looking for a balanced signal path and ignore one of the STEREO channels?

Therefore not getting both Left and Right audio signals to the output audio?

Thanks.

>
Jerica Salava
10.02.2013
After some more research, the safest and most effective way, is to first make sure to set the iPod to mono as recommended above.

Then hook up a 3.5mm Stereo-Y adapter to two mono TS 1/4 inch jacks. Only use one of the jacks to the one speaker.

In the future, if you need more SPL, you can just set the iPod back to normal stereo mode and use both TS jacks to connect both speakers.

>
Jerica Salava
10.02.2013
Originally Posted by Shishdisma
Settings -> General -> Accessibility -> Mono Audio -> On

Took me 5 seconds to get to it, then run a 3.5mm -> 1/4" jack into the speaker. If you use a Y splitter as a passive summing box, you WILL fry your input, as that Rane note says.
Thanks for that iPod mono trick. That will work.

>
Nancey Inderlied
10.02.2013
Settings -> General -> Accessibility -> Mono Audio -> On

Took me 5 seconds to get to it, then run a 3.5mm -> 1/4" jack into the speaker. If you use a Y splitter as a passive summing box, you WILL fry your input, as that Rane note says.
Antonetta Wikel
10.02.2013
My best guess is to say that you'd get your left channel only while the right would be sent to ground but it depends on the internal wiring of the cable, really. I'd say test it beforehand. Worst case is the left & right cancel each other out or seriously degrade the signal. Best case is you get your left channel.
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
Originally Posted by loverocket
Looks like the safe answer would be to take both speakers and a Stereo Y Adapter 3.5mm to dual RCA to 1/4 inch TS.

>
I'll be doing this for FREE ^
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
It's so annoying that the cheapest powered speakers have Stereo RCA inputs:

http://www.amazon.com/Pyle-Pro-PPHP8...wered+speakers

>
Layne Koop
09.02.2013
Originally Posted by loverocket
Looks like the safe answer would be to take both speakers and a Stereo Y Adapter 3.5mm to dual RCA to 1/4 inch TS.
EDIT: I mis-understood your intent. So I am getting rid of my own posting of the Rane 109 tech note. The rest still applies.

Get this, or the equivalent. Plug your stereo source into channels 7 & 9, and pan both of those channels hard left. Then use the left output on the master and run that to the speaker.

http://www.amazon.com/Yamaha-MG102C-.../dp/B000Z7C9T8
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
Looks like the safe answer would be to take both speakers and a Stereo Y Adapter 3.5mm to dual RCA to 1/4 inch TS.

What a pain.

>
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
this is very interesting:

http://www.rane.com/note109.html

>
Jerica Salava
09.02.2013
Behringer B215D. Here is the diagram of the I/O panel:

http://www.behringer.com/assets/B208...5D_fig1_XL.png
Layne Koop
09.02.2013
What's the make & model of the speaker? That will be the best way to get a specific answer.

In general, a speaker is not the right place to mix stereo into mono. If you have any kind of mixer with a mono output capability...that would be the way to go.

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