Reengineering a USB Speaker to 3.5mm

by BambooEngineer in Circuits > Electronics

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Reengineering a USB Speaker to 3.5mm

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Last Year I did this because I needed speakers for a project that consisted of a NES Clone. It ended up working and I thought it would be good to make an Instructable for because its not a huge task to take and it builds upon knowledge.

Keep in mind this Instructable will not be very detailed, it will basically just point you in the right direction.

Q: Why Reengineer a USB speaker to the 'universal' 3.5mm Jack?

A: To build knowledge & experience or you might just need a speaker for something that uses 3.5mm etc....................

In my opinion USB speakers are the cheapest speakers but maybe I'm not looking in the right places.

The speaker I used for this Instructable has a 3.5mm jack but its for plugging in headphones not to input audio


TOOLS + PARTS

Tools:

SOLDERING IRON ( with a sponge to clean it of course ) + SOLDER

WIRE + WIRE CUTTERS + WIRE STRIPPERS

MULTIMETER

SCREWDRIVER

Parts:

USB SPEAKER ( make sure it doesn't have 3.5mm if your doing this for experience )

3.5MM JACK ( Desolder one off of something or buy one online )

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01N5DIZQG/ref=sspa_dk_d...

# If your not confident with your soldering skills then I recommend flux because you can bridge the tiny pins on Chips REALLY FAST if your not extremely careful and flux makes it a bit easier in my opinion #

https://www.amazon.com/Rectorseal-14000-1-7-Ounce-...

Taking Apart the Speaker

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1. Grab your screwdriver

2. Take apart the Speaker in till you have access to its Circuit Board

Chip Identification

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1. Look for any Chips on the Circuit Board

2. Try to find they're Datasheets online and learn how they work

3.5mm Jack

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1. From the Knowledge you gained from the Chip's Datasheet, Solder one of It's pins and wire it to the 3.5mm Jack.

2. Plug some Audio into the Jack ( 3.5mm cord ) and see if it works !

If its working but the audio is really bad check and see if the audio going to that pin goes through a Capacitor or Resistor first.