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Piezo to normal speaker conversion

  • Thread starter SixteenThirtytwo
  • Start date
S

SixteenThirtytwo

I have a device with a built-in piezo speaker, but I'd like to get a
regular "line out" or normal speaker output from it and see if the
sound quality improves because of that.
How do I do that?
 
C

Charles Schuler

SixteenThirtytwo said:
I have a device with a built-in piezo speaker, but I'd like to get a
regular "line out" or normal speaker output from it and see if the
sound quality improves because of that.
How do I do that?

Piezo "buzzers" run off of dc. Connecting dc to a speaker will only make a
click (and later smoke if the dc voltage is high enough).

Piezo speakers are used for high-frequency sound generation (tweeters).

Did you mean buzzer or speaker?
 
J

jasen

I have a device with a built-in piezo speaker, but I'd like to get a
regular "line out" or normal speaker output from it and see if the
sound quality improves because of that.
How do I do that?

basically you disconnect thr piezo and connect a line out socket in its
place the details depend on the device

Bye.
Jasen
 
S

SixteenThirtytwo

Piezo "buzzers" run off of dc. Connecting dc to a speaker will only make a
click (and later smoke if the dc voltage is high enough).

Piezo speakers are used for high-frequency sound generation (tweeters).

Did you mean buzzer or speaker?

Speaker.
I have two similar toys where one has a regular 8 Ohm speaker (and a
headphone jack) and the other one uses a piezo speaker.
I've managed to get a "Line out" signal by experimenting with various
resistors, and even managed to remove some of the low frequency
signals and boost the high frequency ones. It now sounds a little
"cleaner" and clearer, but is still crap compared to the other toy.
Perhaps the signal out in itself is bad because the designers didn't
bother to clean it up as it was just to drive that piezo speaker.
 
I have a device with a built-in piezo speaker, but I'd like to get a
regular "line out" or normal speaker output from it and see if the
sound quality improves because of that.
How do I do that?

Hello,
Yes, the pietzo is a high voltage - low current device, as opposed
to a speaker which is a low voltage - high current device. What
you need is one transistor to boost up your current. You can use
a simple npn transistor, connect the collector to vcc, base to
your pietzo, speaker to emitter, other side of speaker to gnd.
seperate the base from the other stage with a 1uF capacitor,
connect a trimmer from the base to vcc. Then use the trimmer
to adjust the emitter dc voltage to be vcc/2. This should give you
a pritty loud output from an 8ohm speaker.
 
J

Jeff Dieterle

Not meaning to hijack but are their any issues going the other way. I
replaced my jukebox tweeters with piezo tweeters. The only reason was in
trying to find a matching physical size the piezo tweeters were a 1/4 the
price and new versus taking a gamble with used speakers on ePay.
 
B

Bob Masta

Not meaning to hijack but are their any issues going the other way. I
replaced my jukebox tweeters with piezo tweeters. The only reason was in
trying to find a matching physical size the piezo tweeters were a 1/4 the
price and new versus taking a gamble with used speakers on ePay.

Be sure to use the recommended crossover cap, often supplied
with piezo tweeters. Don't expect the exact same frequency
response... that's true of all speakers, but especially for tweeters
because they are run out to their upper frequency limits since there
is typically no higher-frequency driver, and since almost all speakers
get flaky at their high end.

Best regards,




Bob Masta

D A Q A R T A
Data AcQuisition And Real-Time Analysis
www.daqarta.com
Scope, Spectrum, Spectrogram, Signal Generator
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