iImage Information

This surround sound simulator is based on other surround sound wiring I have seen, that turns stereo sound to surround sound. How it works is that it plays different sound in the front and back speakers, sounding very much like real surround sound.
Feel free to comment if you have any questions.
Polarity matters a great deal. Electromagnets can and do repel. It all depends on the direction of the current flow in the wire (which is why polarity matters). Try touching the wires from a speaker to a AA battery. Hook it up one way and the cone moves out. Reverse the polarity and the cone will move in.
What I'm talking about that though is that both the rear speakers are only getting positive connections, you need both a positive and a negative so that the current can flow, otherwise its just sitting there doing nothing... I mean thats how switches work they cut off either the positive or the negative connection so the current has nowhere to go...
I hope this helps.
You want to be sure you can bridge your amplifier's outputs l/r +/- or you might be a sad panda...but very cool.