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I bought a home theater system that doesn't have a headphone jack, but sometimes at night when I am watching movies, it's too loud and I need to use headphones to watch. Is there some kind of converter that I can hook up to the home theater reciever to allow me to use headphones?

2007-01-12 14:01:02 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Other - Electronics

the headphones are wirless, and the receiver has a cable splitting into red and white. There are no open red and white sockets for them. And there is not headphone jack either.

2007-01-12 14:08:59 · update #1

Problem solved. I bought a different home theater system witha headphone jack and realized that there is a converter that came with the headphone system which combines both red and black cables into one headphone plug. Thanks for the help.

2007-01-13 09:38:25 · update #2

5 answers

Interesting question and I hope I have the answer.

First though let me say that from your additional description, you cannot easily use the headphones that you have with a conventional headphone jack (1/4" 3 conductor). It sounds like you need audio line outputs to feed the wireless transmitter. Do the headphones have a volume control built into it?

If you are watching movies from just one source such as a DVD player or VCR then I would use the audio line outputs of that unit and turn the sound down on the system. If you currently use those outputs to feed your system then you would need to get a Y splitter for each channel.
This might get tricky though if your DVD player is integrated with your home theater system - then I'd ask you if you have any RCA line outputs on your system? If you do then I'd try and hook up the headphones there.

Good luck. I'm sure your neighbors will appreciate the peace and quiet!

2007-01-12 14:39:49 · answer #1 · answered by gkk_72 7 · 0 0

No there is no converter that will help you, you need an amplifier.

A home theater sends audio out in 5.1 format. That is to a left front speaker, a left rear speaker, a right rear speaker, a right front speaker, a center speaker, and a sub-audio speaker, the woofer (the 0.1 part of the system). Headphones only have a right and left speaker. So it is impossible to blend the two systems unless you have an amplifier to do it.

Most amplifiers come with a headphone jack. The modern and advanced ones can handle 5.1 sound and they can blend it into standard dual channel sound, which headphones use.

2007-01-12 14:09:41 · answer #2 · answered by Dan S 7 · 0 0

Your television has probable a pair (stereo) of RCA jacks (analog out). once you've a stereo integrated amp or equivalent to that, you could connect those outputs out of your television set to the analog inputs of that amp, and with slightly of success that integrated amp has a headphone jack. yet another answer is to purchase a headphone preamp, and use the same type o connections as in above. a third decision is from a CD walkman which have an analog enter the position you should use an adaptor from RCA to mini-plug. A fourth decision is get a cheap boombox that really have a stereo pair of analog inputs (and a headphone jack obviously). A fifth decision is to get a cheap integrated amp or stereo (or multichannel) receiver from the thrift save (about $5 to $10 max). A sixth decision is to apply a transportable DVD participant, and back use the adaptor that contains it.

2016-12-02 04:47:50 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes. You can go to your local Radio Shack and buy a RCA to mini-jack converter. If the genders are wrong, then you can buy gender changers.

RCA (red/white) female on a home theater system. But an adapter that has RCA (red/white) male to 3.5mm female jack. Then, you can plug headphones into it.

2007-01-12 14:05:46 · answer #4 · answered by techman2000 6 · 0 0

I don´t know

2007-01-12 14:05:03 · answer #5 · answered by Yenner Z 1 · 0 1

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