I often use an mp3 player or CD walkman with a pair of powered speakers to provide back ground music in reception rooms. I use a a 3.5mm stereo jack to phone lead, connected to a home made phono to XLR leads (phono pin & ring to XLR hot & cold).
But next week I have limited space for speakers and intend to use a single speaker. The music will be 50's & 60's and includes songs with instruments, or even vocals in only one of the stereo channels, so obviously I need to mono the two channels before feeding in to the single powered speaker. (The speaker only has one XLR input.)
Can I make up a cable to resistively mix the two channels? My guess is that as the headphone output is low impedance, using the same resistor value on each channel will effectively see a potential divider down to ground, giving a 6dB (50%) signal drop from each channel. (But will the addition of the two channels give a 6dB increase in signal to make up to a similar level?)
Will such an arrangement work OK?
I was thinking resistors of around 100ohms each.
Many thanks in advance for the advice.
