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Signing UpStep 1: Cut up an old phone cord
get some earbud headphones, cut the earbuds off and cut the jack off.
you will need:
1 earbud
1 jack (stereo or mono)
1 cut phone cord
multimeter
soldering iron
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lol this reminds me of agents from Matrix
Photo 1 shows how a stereo plug mechanically connects. Terms: Plug=male, Jack=female. The shaft of the plug contacts the hole of the jack, establishing the ground (-) connection. The tip of the plug contacts a metal finger deep in the jack, establishing one of the channels' + connections. A portion of the plug's barrel near the tip touches another metal finger, less deep in the jack, establishing the other + channel connection.
Photo 2 shows how each half of the plug/jack mate and keep the two stereo channels separate.
Photo 3 shows how if you plug a mono plug into a stereo source, the full shaft of the mono plug (lacking that special separate barrel section) ends up shorting out the channels amp output that with a proper stereo plug would have carried that channel's circuit.
I can almost guarantee you that all those stories are false. Anyone with even a little bit of electrical engineering experience will tell you that the best way to test for a short is to use a multimeter. I don't have a multimeter, so I did another test:
Construct a simple LED circuit. For the switch, use a stereo jack (female), and wire one side to the ring connector and the other side to the sleeve connector. When you insert a mono plug (male) into the jack, the LED comes on, because the sleeve on the mono plug shorts out the connectors of the stereo jack's ring and sleeve terminals.
Stereo. u turn 2 taps in the bathroom on half way. the sink drains the water easy.
Mono. u turn 1 tap on full. which = 2 taps on half. the sing still drains easy.
the ground or the sink hole always has the same load on it.
You agree that with stereo, Tip/Ring/Sleeve == +Left/+Right/-Both, correct?
And you agree that with mono, it is Tip/Sleeve == +Both/-Both, correct?