No. Home Theater receivers that have hdmi inputs upscale component to hdmi, but not the other way around.
To connect one speaker to the right and left outputs of a stereo amplifier, split the input into two parts. These should go to the left and right signals. The input of the amps should be a stereo input.
It's not as simple as making a cable that fits. Digital audio cables and digital signals, both coaxial and optical, require a digital input. You need to convert the digital signal to analog to work with older receivers. These are available (Google Digital to Analog Converter or DA Converter). Just about every device that has a digital output will also have an analog stereo output, which will work with your old gear.
That would be where you connect anything with a STEREO AUDIO OUTPUT.
There isn't one. If you wand an AUX input, you need to buy an adapter or an aftermarket stereo. There isn't one. If you wand an AUX input, you need to buy an adapter or an aftermarket stereo.
Not to the outputs. A band-pass equalizer works on input signals. To put it simply: if your stereo is the source of the sound, you would have to open the stereo up with schematics of its electronics in hand and find a suitable place to "pop in" an equalizer. If your stereo is only taking a signal from some other device and amplifying it (in essence doing the job of an amplifier with external signal source), put the equalizer between the source and the stereo. Please note that an antenna is NOT an "external source" - the radio frequencies are decoded INSIDE the stereo, and only then produce a valid "input signal" - all within the electronics of the stereo.
it depends if u are using the stock stereo then no but if it is not a stock stereo then u may have an aux input jack which comes out the back of the stereo the easiest way is to just pull out the stereo and take a look
yes. There are two LowZ inputs, and a third input with a mini stereo jack
stereo mixer output to powered mixer input
An AUX input has to be supported by both the hardware and the software of the stereo. Generally this will require a complete replacement.
A multiplexor is used to encode multiple input signals for transmission over a single channel. This works because the bandwidth of the output channel is higher than the bandwidth of the input signals, allowing the input signals to share the output channel. At the other end, a de-multiplexor decodes the channel and decodes the individual input signals.
no
No