I am using RCA panel mount connectors because thats what I have, you could make this all with 3.5mm stereo jacks, 1/4" phono jacks, or even a mix of different types! I want to give credit to Curt @ scribd for his inspirational writeup, I'm essentially adding photos, visual design and diagrams.
Currently I have my mac tower, xbox 360, and laptop connected to the same set of speakers with no problems. I wanted to make a small, non-powered box that looked good sitting on the desk.
Build Time: 1 hour, not including research + documentation
Total Cost: $15
$8 -Diecast Project box
$2.50 -Panel mount connectors, (six RCA female, one 3.5mm stereo female)
$2 -18 or 20 gauge wire, solid strand (this should get you 10-20 ft. I only used 8 inches total)
$2 -4.7k-ohm 1/2 watt Resistors
$.50 - Small Ruber Feet
Tools Needed:
Drill, 1/4" bit
Soldering iron, Solder
Electrical tape or Heat Shrink tubes
Knife or actual wire stripper
*optional* Dremel to thin out the wall of my project box, yours might be fine without
*optional* Alligator clamps to test connections before soldering everything together
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Signing UpStep 1Detailed Part List Photos
The Diecast box actually worked out to save me about 20 minutes of soldering because it is conductive enough to ground all of these connections. Win.
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I have a Nintendo NES, Nintendo 64 and Nintendo Gamecube !!
Can I put all of it in single Rca Video Connector ?
Thank you !!!
Is there a limit to how many signals I can mix? My box has room for 7 inputs (10 RCA L/R channels and 2 3.5mm channels). Will mixing these many introduce any noise into the mixer? I'm only going to use 4 of them, but because my box has 7 built-in inputs, I thought it'd leave room for my mixer to grow. Please advise!
I'm also planning on splitting the output into two streams, one for front speakers, one for rear. Do I need to do anything special to split the audio? Is it okay to use some 22 gauge wire to split the output to an OUT 1 and OUT 2 (essentially, a Y split)?
This is my first time building anything like this. I'm not a noob with electronics, I've just never constructed anything myself before. I'm very excited, though I want to make sure that the end result will work the way it's supposed to. Thanks for any advice you guys can offer!
I've linked an crude layout of my connections so you can get an idea of what it looks like, let me know if there is anything wrong with the wiring (for purposes of clarity, I left out the resistors in the sketch)
http://yfrog.com/5ztestopoj