Regular stereo speakers connected to a CRT TV through the headphone jack. The TV only gets used for NES and SNES so it’s not like surround would do anything.
@brennyn Are you powering external speakers with the television’s own built-in audio amplifier (the one that normally drives the TV’s built-in speakers)? I am surprised it is powerful enough to do that.
2.1 stereo. Two Realistic Minimus 3.5s and an RCA branded powered subwoofer probably made in the early 2000s, all driven by a Lepai LP-2020A+ amplifier. Surprisingly good combo.
No television, no sound system.
@heartny You are missing out!
Soundbar, subwoofer and two rear speakers.
/showme dogs and cats as the speaker and subwoofer for a sound system
@mycya4me Here’s the image you requested for “dogs and cats as the speaker and subwoofer for a sound system”
@mediocrebot that s what you call a Dog Gone sounds system.
@mediocrebot @mycya4me
Yikes. Creepy!
@Kyeh @mediocrebot @mycya4me
That’s doggone nutz!
Regular stereo speakers connected to a CRT TV through the headphone jack. The TV only gets used for NES and SNES so it’s not like surround would do anything.
@brennyn Are you powering external speakers with the television’s own built-in audio amplifier (the one that normally drives the TV’s built-in speakers)? I am surprised it is powerful enough to do that.
2.1 stereo. Two Realistic Minimus 3.5s and an RCA branded powered subwoofer probably made in the early 2000s, all driven by a Lepai LP-2020A+ amplifier. Surprisingly good combo.
My TV’s sound system is the built-in speakers. Not as crappy as my hearing, so
/shrug.
If I want better, I use wireless headphones,