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Aflack
January 17th, 2012, 02:15 AM
I need my subwoofer with an aux out be able to go to my xbox and my computer... right now i have it plugged into a thing that was red and white cords, and i use that with my VGA xbox adapter... but i need my comp and xbox to be hooked up to it at the same time. What can i use to do that..?

Copper Bezel
January 17th, 2012, 03:43 AM
An RCA switch box (http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=rca+cable+switch&tag=googhydr-20&index=aps&hvadid=3451304189&ref=pd_sl_41va6q1a2c_e). The red and white cables are called RCA cables.

Edit: Or just an RCA splitter, for that matter, if you're just sending two sets of signals to the same speakers.

Aflack
January 17th, 2012, 03:56 AM
An RCA switch box (http://www.amazon.com/s/?ie=UTF8&keywords=rca+cable+switch&tag=googhydr-20&index=aps&hvadid=3451304189&ref=pd_sl_41va6q1a2c_e). The red and white cables are called RCA cables.

Edit: Or just an RCA splitter, for that matter, if you're just sending two sets of signals to the same speakers.

my speakers out cable is an auxiliary. i use an aux to r/w rca converter thing for my xbox's vga adapter.

its a subwoofer + 2 speaker sysmtem thats connected with that one auxiliary out

forrestcupp
January 17th, 2012, 04:10 AM
my speakers out cable is an auxiliary. i use an aux to r/w rca converter thing for my xbox's vga adapter.

its a subwoofer + 2 speaker sysmtem thats connected with that one auxiliary out

Auxiliary cables are the same thing as RCA cables. You're probably talking about an 1/8th inch plug to RCA adapter.

What you could do, is get two adapters, like the one in the picture below, plug one into the red jack on your speaker, and one into the white jack. Then you'll have two inputs that you can run from the outputs on your computer, and Xbox.

http://lh6.googleusercontent.com/public/l2Antppe6Xfehl2yr2tary68L0neCbrP1tMM9JGoBBnN9E4unW 4Sh_NOcIOlOcyWABREsTQfYwaz3DOBn9vR-cWjX9Y1L6Iuga1j6jhYHMnxEc86oPBbhGYbtdEWrkEOzZbqEAk 1rFZa1K4ozCv_BbGj1bhkIxI

cariboo
January 17th, 2012, 04:26 AM
IF you have the speakers connected to both you Xbox and your computer, and they are both running at the same time, you may suffer from cross-talk ie: both systems outputting audio at the same time. Another problem you may have is that you could possibly break something on either the computer or the Xbox. Speaker systems are cheap enough, that you would be much better off buying another one.

Copper Bezel
January 17th, 2012, 04:33 AM
Using the full switchbox instead of Y cables would prevent that issue, though. It just adds the extra step of flipping the switch when switching between devices.

Aflack
January 17th, 2012, 04:34 AM
IF you have the speakers connected to both you Xbox and your computer, and they are both running at the same time, you may suffer from cross-talk ie: both systems outputting audio at the same time. Another problem you may have is that you could possibly break something on either the computer or the Xbox. Speaker systems are cheap enough, that you would be much better off buying another one.

yes but my xbox and comp are in my room. i dont want to have any more wires than i already do :P thanks everyone ill just buy those.

aeiah
January 17th, 2012, 01:13 PM
you shouldn't use a splitter cable, although it may work. splitter cables are used to drive two outputs using one input (like a headphone splitter or something), not merge two inputs into one speaker system. the xbox is fairly resiliant, but the current from its audio output could feed into your computer's soundcard if you just use splitters - and your pc might not be prepared for input current on its output socket.

the correct approach is to use a mixer or switch. i have my xbox and pc plugged into a mixer i made (actually, a passive summer, since it has no volume control). both can output to the speakers at the same time. ive been using it for about 3 years. it isn't very complicated. i just followed guides like this:

http://www.instructables.com/id/Altoids-Tin-18-Stereo-Mixer/

although i used 4k7 resistors i think. some people suggest 100k, others 2k2, and others 100 ohm. its just there to stop current going into the other output.

a headphone splitter that accepts a 2nd input would have this circuit in place, as would a simple stereo mixer

forrestcupp
January 17th, 2012, 03:54 PM
True, folks. I wouldn't be too concerned with the speakers, but I didn't think about driving output into the other outputs. a switch box is the way to go.

It's kind of overkill, but I once had an rf modulator that also had aux outputs, and it was set up to automatically switch based on the order you plugged the devices in. When a priority device is turned on, it automatically switches to that output. I wonder if they make automatic aux switch boxes like that.