- Joined: August 2003
- Location: SF Bay Area
- Post Count: 2,340
I would hook them up to the "B" speaker outlet and use them in another room for casual stereo listening.
I wouldn't hook them up to the front or back speakers because it would either throw off the surround effect by having sound coming from where it wasn't designed to or it would screw up the impendance the receiver would see. Splitting the wire and hooking up two speakers to one speaker wire in "parallel" would change an 8 ohm load to a 4 ohm load. I'm pretty sure your avr isn't 4 ohm compatible. For the surround channels it probably wouldn't cause a problem, but why take chances. Wiring two speakers to a single wire in "series" would convert an 8 ohm load to a 16 ohm load. This wouldn't hurt anything but the volume of each speaker would be cut in half. It would be the better of the two wiring options but again, the surround field might sound a little strange.
You could invest in a wireless speaker adapter (expensive) and hook them up to the proper surround back channels. Otherwise, put them in a box and stick them in your wife's shoe closet

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"Everyday room": Mitsubishi 52631 RPTV, H/K 520, H/K dvd-5, H/K 8380, H/K CDR 20, OPPO BDP-83 BluRay player, Dish-HD, Infinity Beta 20's-C250-OWS1's, Dayton HSU10.
"Movie/Music room": Toshiba 65HM167 RPTV, Pioneer Elite 59txi, Elite DV59avi, Elite CD-59, Pioneer PD-51FD BR, Dish-DVR, Swan Diva...
- Joined: August 2003
- Location: SF Bay Area
- Post Count: 2,340
Actually, a response is required because I forgot to mention a couple of things.
First, when hooking a pair of speakers to the B speaker output, whatever is heard thru the A, or main speakers, is what will be heard thru the B speakers. In otherwords, if your watching a movie in the main room you will hear the movie in the laundry room as well.
Second, in order to get Dolby Digital or DTS in the main room the B speaker might have to be turned off. Otherwise, the receiver might switch Dolby/DTS to Dolby ProLogic. Different systems handle this differently but I thought I'd mention it.
To answer your question, a stereo source will send an identicle signal to the A and B speakers, assuming both buttons are pushed in. In short, both the A and B speakers share the same amplifier and signal processing so they both emit the same program material. This is quite different from a Zone Two, for those who have that feature.
"Everyday room": Mitsubishi 52631 RPTV, H/K 520, H/K dvd-5, H/K 8380, H/K CDR 20, OPPO BDP-83 BluRay player, Dish-HD, Infinity Beta 20's-C250-OWS1's, Dayton HSU10.
"Movie/Music room": Toshiba 65HM167 RPTV, Pioneer Elite 59txi, Elite DV59avi, Elite CD-59, Pioneer PD-51FD BR, Dish-DVR, Swan Diva...