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RE: (ukha_d) super cheap home house audio !!!!!!!!



OK, I tried this yesterday, and it works fine.  I've got phone points in 4 rooms
(one of them the master socket), all with 6-core cable going to them, linked
serially.  I've just plumbed in a couple of sockets at the moment as I only had
2 x 3.5mm jacks sitting around, but it works fine.  In my wiring, the
green/white & white/green wires were the one's not connected to anything.

Obviously the sound is only mono, but for TTS and crude audio distribution it's
just fine, and as the article says, dirt cheap.

Don't forget to link all the sockets even if you're not going to use them,
otherwise the chain won't be complete and you may not get audio.  Also, and this
is a top tip, check and double check that the sound card is actually outputting
a signal, _before_ removing and resoldering all the poxy phone sockets because
there's no sound.  Grrrr!

Pete

-----Original Message-----
From: MIME:umar@xxxxxxx at INTERNET
Sent: 12 May 2002 07:45
To: White, Peter; ukha_d@xxxxxxx at Internet
Subject: [ukha_d] super cheap home house audio !!!!!!!!


I have been searching for an affordable whole house audio system.

I saw the following on

http://www.hometoys.com/tips/tips26.htm#Entry 3

Any thoughts - certainly is a cheap way - and instead of phone jacks cat5
would be suitable !!!!!!!

Umar

***********************************************************
Entry 3 - Whole  House Audio for WELL Under $50

John Panicci   john@xxxxxxx Products
Gadgets
Click Here

I use a program called "Home Seer", which many of you reading this probably
already have or at least something similar.  Home seer can be set to report
a number of things via it's 'text to speech' interface. This can range from
announcements that someone is coming up the sidewalk, motion has been
detected in the backyard, caller id information when the phone rings,
weather alerts, breaking news announcements etc. This is all well and good
if you happen to be by the computer when one of these events takes place and
you are in the room to hear it.  If you are using another software package,
it's audio can also be transmitted easily throughout the home.  Heck, even
if you are not using  any type of  'text to speech" system, this is a great
way to pipe those MP3's you have been stockpiling to any room in your home
easily!

Thus, I was looking for a way to put audio throughout my house easily and
making it affordable at the same time. There are quite a few options to do
this, but this is what I have settled on, and it was well within my budget.

First, I purchased a few sets of cheap AMPLIFIED computer speakers from
Tiger Direct.  These speakers are stylish, and also produce very good
quality sound for music playback! The first thing I had to decide is how to
get the audio into other rooms in my home. Luckily, I have a single phone
line in my house and this was easily solved. There are 4 wires in a standard
telephone wire that travels throughout your home. 99.9% of the time the red
and green wires are used for the first line of the telephone. This leaves
the black and yellow wires unused.  If you are unsure, when you remove the
jack you can disconnect the red and green wires and test to see if you have
a dialtone, if not then those are the wires used by your phone line.  I
currently have DSL access in my home and that also just uses the first 2
wires (the read and green ones) and this setup will not interfere with DLS
in any way.

IF you are using both phone lines, don't throw in the towel yet! You can
still run the wire manually to the rooms you wish to have audio in and still
be able to control which speakers are on. Read on, just skipping the steps
to install the 1/8 jacks.
I removed the phone jack nearest to my computer and drilled a small hole
allowing me to mount the 1/8 jack into the phone plate. This was very simple
and has a professional installation look when you screw on the nut to hold
the jack in place. I then attached the black and the yellow wires to the
jack and replaced the wall plate. In rooms where I wanted to place the
speakers, I also drilled and mounted the the 1/8 jacks and replaced the
plates.

That done, now comes the easy part!

Take a 1/8 to 1/8 cable and plug one end into the audio output on your sound
card. The other goes into the phone you prepared close to the computer
earlier. You now have audio going to every jack that you installed in other
rooms in your home.

Now to automate the speakers, simply plug in the lamp module close to the
phone jack and plug the amplified speakers into the module. Attach the
speaker cord to the phone jack. After you have your speakers all plugged
into your phone jacks, and into the controlling modules, you are ready to
go!

Grab a handy palm pad or other controller, and you can now switch the
speakers on and off in any room of your choice! Being the speakers are
amplified, you can run all of the speakers in all rooms at the same time if
you wish!

To automate even further, I have motion detectors set up in each room with
the speakers so the computer "knows" what rooms are occupied, and if a call
comes in, the computer turns on the speakers in the room that is occupied
and announces the caller. This can off course all be programmed in Home Seer
as to announce only between certain hours, on certain callers etc. I have
also set the last button on the palm pad to tell Home Seer to ignore the
motion detectors, and take commands from the palm pad only. This is great
when there is motion in the kitchen, and I want to listen to the MP3's on
the living room stereo system.

On another note, I also wired this into my downstairs stereo. Using a simple
1/8 to dual RCA plugs, I was able to play MP3's from my computer  upstairs
through the stereo downstairs. Yes, it is in mono, but still comes through
with excellent sound quality on the "simulated surround sound" setting on my
stereo system. Of course I had to carry it a step further by using another
palm pad to send play/pause/skip to the next song commands etc. to the
server.

NOTE: You probably have most of the following items already

List of Components:

* Some form of X-10 Transceiver
* Lamp  Module
* Palm Pad or other controller
* 1/8 jacks and plugs
* Amplified Speakers

Approximate Total Cost of Components

* Amplified speakers  10.99  Tiger Direct Cat# B500-2034 (These are the
speakers that I am using and actually provide GOOD quality music playback)
* Lamp Module  $12.99  X-10 Cat# LM465
* 1/8" Female Jacks(2 per package) $2.49  Radio Shack Cat.#: 274-251
* 1/8" phone to 1/8" phone (6 Ft.) $2.69  Radio Shack Cat.#: 42-2420



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