Connect an Ipod or other Mp3 player to normal household speakers without an expensive and bulky amplifier!

 by Bartboy

Step 1: Gather up those materiels.

You will need the following:

2 alligator clips ( may substitute heat shrink tubing, but this is easier)

1 Pair of wire strippers and cutters, I used gardening scissors because of their ability to do both.

1 Pair of cheep headphones, I used some westjet ones.

1 Speaker, mine is just a cheep sony one.

That's it!

Gather them up and continue!
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crtn2 says: Nov 30, 2012. 10:38 AM
i tried this with a pair of speakers from old TV and it works great. btw tried this way before i saw this instructable.
chekespeare says: Oct 28, 2011. 6:53 PM
mmm...How old are you? . I think you do better if you get an old computer amplified speaker and just disconet the original speaker cables and then connect your bigger speaker to that cables. be careful and be sure to disconect the power cord from wall.
lilBrent says: Jun 2, 2011. 3:53 PM
Is there anything i can use to substitute for the clips?? or will it work without them?
Bartboy (author) in reply to lilBrentJun 5, 2011. 9:41 PM
You could probably just twist the wires together, or use heatshrink. I used these cause they're easy.
Nefertari770 says: Aug 12, 2010. 10:05 PM
ok I have tried both variations of the wire connection and it is still not working and I am rather frustrated. Is there anything else that could be wrong?
knexsuperbuilderfreak in reply to Nefertari770Aug 31, 2010. 8:01 AM
i could be that the speaker needs the amp do to its power use because if its not it a large speaker using up alot of your battery life
evanwehrer says: Dec 2, 2008. 6:37 AM
I don't mean to be rude, and I'm not saying this isn't a great instructable, but the amplifier is there to provide power to the speakers, so doing this could damage your iPod and destroy your battery.
nicholast in reply to evanwehrerJul 25, 2010. 4:56 PM
If you don't know what your talking about please don't post stuff like this, it won't hurt anything. You just might get shorter play time off the iPod.
Bartboy (author) in reply to evanwehrerDec 2, 2008. 7:51 AM
No, it won't damage the ipod or destroy the battery, but it will wear the battery down more, like using a headphone splitter with two headphones. I would suggest plugging it in when you do this. And yes, the amplifier provides power to the speakers, so you can go a bit louder, but this works better than the cheap ipod speakers.
oli1122 in reply to BartboyFeb 22, 2011. 2:53 AM
It will damage your ipod battery. By draining the extra power needed for a speaker of that power can cause permanent damage to your ipod. By using more power than recommended you will dramatically shorten your ipod life time from around 5 years to 1 or 2.
Bartboy (author) in reply to oli1122Feb 22, 2011. 8:27 PM
I've had my ipod video for over 4 years and the battery on it still works better (lasts a lot longer) than my new iPhone.
evanwehrer in reply to evanwehrerDec 2, 2008. 6:38 AM
Oh, and great pictures!
Bartboy (author) in reply to evanwehrerApr 23, 2009. 7:35 AM
Yay! Macro function FTW!
tinstructable says: Jul 21, 2010. 3:21 AM
Wait, so how does this work? it just looks like you made the wires longer on the speaker cable.
Bartboy (author) in reply to tinstructableJul 21, 2010. 10:45 AM
It's one of those stereo speakers, that you usually have to plug into an amp. By cutting a 3.5mm cable, you can connect it directly to an MP3 player.
TheRealTobobias says: Jul 15, 2010. 4:52 PM
Please help. I have the cable and connected them but it doesnt work...
Bartboy (author) in reply to TheRealTobobiasJul 17, 2010. 3:19 PM
Just keep playing around with the wires, it took me a while.
jj.inc says: Feb 17, 2010. 8:00 PM
 Is it loud or just audible 
Bartboy (author) in reply to jj.incFeb 18, 2010. 8:43 AM
It's louder than the built-in ipod speakers (Ipod touch and Ipod Nano only), but obviously it would be a lot louder with an amp.
jj.inc in reply to BartboyFeb 21, 2010. 2:36 PM
 Thanks
bsnowman17 in reply to jj.incJun 22, 2010. 7:18 PM
A simple mosfet or bjt amplifier could make it much more amplified, and its a simple circuit that shouldn't cost more than a couple bucks to make
anth101 says: May 25, 2010. 5:54 PM
never mind i figured it out
anth101 says: May 25, 2010. 5:48 PM
so what do i connect the head phone wires to?
3VIL G3NIUS says: Nov 19, 2009. 9:17 PM
 really really please use a amplifier! or you could damage your iPod! headphones are generally 32 ohms, most home audio speakers are 8, 6 or 4.
running any amplifier at less than half the rated ohmage cause damage to it. 
and about those connections its stereo not mono so each of the wires that go to each earphone have a negative and a positive so you really should hook it up on only one of the wires (preferably the right side) and use the negative and positive on that side. if you don't you could accidentally short one channel without realizing it has happened. and that could damage the amplifier as well.
Bartboy (author) in reply to 3VIL G3NIUSNov 20, 2009. 9:18 AM
32 Ohms?
Are you sure about that?
3VIL G3NIUS in reply to BartboyNov 20, 2009. 9:04 PM
 Yep im sure!
Bartboy (author) in reply to 3VIL G3NIUSNov 21, 2009. 7:41 AM
Well that's a huge difference, but that won't break the ipod, only the speakers.
And I said to use cheap speakers.

3VIL G3NIUS in reply to BartboyNov 22, 2009. 7:52 PM
 wrong way round. it wont break the speakers but it could break the iPod.
Bartboy (author) in reply to 3VIL G3NIUSNov 23, 2009. 4:31 AM
How could it break the ipod?
3VIL G3NIUS in reply to BartboyJan 10, 2010. 1:15 AM
sorry bout the late reply...
a ohmage too low for a amp causes it try and push too much electricty through it so it gets fried.
think of a battery they can go nice and happy on a decent load, but put something that takes too much current on it and it will heat up and get damaged. 
megagrapen says: Nov 21, 2009. 9:46 PM
didn't work for me, i'm using an 8 ohm, 1 watt, RCA speaker,some cheep headphones a friend gave to me, no alligator clips, and an 8 gig ipod tough 3g,
Please Help!!!
Bartboy (author) in reply to megagrapenNov 22, 2009. 2:44 PM
Hmm, I really don't know, but I'd guess you didn't get the polarity right.
Try, try, and try again is all I can say.
bduivis says: Apr 23, 2009. 6:11 AM
Hey guys, I'm wondering, don't I need an amplifier? cause when you hook up your ipod to your speaker it still needs power right?
Dracanse in reply to bduivisNov 19, 2009. 4:58 PM
 hey i made speaker on bike instruct ...and yes you whould...
Bartboy (author) in reply to bduivisApr 23, 2009. 7:33 AM
This method works well enough, but it is not as loud as it would be if you used an amplifier. This method is louder than those cheep speakers that don't take batteries or plug in. Watch the video to see how loud this is (Note I filmed this with a 49.99$ camera).
Axel_Brian in reply to BartboyMay 20, 2009. 12:35 PM
But if you use your mp3 without an amplifier the components inside will heat up and probably burn or melt because theres not enought resistance
Bartboy (author) in reply to Axel_BrianMay 20, 2009. 3:48 PM
Umm.. no. All that happens is the battery drains faster, well that happens to me.
longeke says: Jul 23, 2009. 11:14 AM
Can u wire it without the alligator clips??? or make your own alligator clips??
Bartboy (author) in reply to longekeJul 25, 2009. 4:42 PM
A: Yes, but it won't work as well. B: Good idea....
Father Christmas says: Jan 27, 2009. 3:36 PM
i like the idea. but i absolutely hate using speakers with my mp3 player. it just isnt worth it. I have one of those cheap 4gb elements(kmart and sears FTW!! jk) the battery doesnt really die any faster, but its built in speaker is generally louder.
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