Yes, it works really, really well!! 

  I used to use two speakers for four separate radios in my 1961 
 Dodge Seneca during the mid-sixties.  I didn't use the 'big 
 capacitor' either. 

  If one of the radios was not turned on, it worked anyway. 

  I simply 'refuse' to tell you it won't work because I do know 
 better. 

  73, 

  Neil - WA6KLA 

Joe Montierth wrote:
> 
> Here's what you can do if both radios are
> transformerless and have a single hot side and a
> ground side. This will not work if both speaker leads
> are "hot", this will only work if the speaker amp goes
> through a big capacitor then to the speaker, the other
> side grounded:
> 
> Wire the hot side of each speaker output to one side
> of the speaker, no ground needed. Both radios need to
> be "on" for this to work. I did this for years in a
> company truck, so I don't want to hear from you
> nay-sayers that it won't work. If you don't want to
> monitor one of the radios, it needs to be "on" anyway,
> and the volume turned down.
> 
> Radio A>---------<speaker>-------<Radio B
> 
> I could explain how this works, but first I want
> everyone to tell me that it won't work, will destroy
> the radio, will sould bad, etc., because thats what
> happens anytime I share this with someone.  :)
> 
> Joe
> 
> --- DCFluX <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> >
> > Thats what I wanted to do, but this has to be a
> > discrete solution.
> > The radios have BTL output.
> >
> >
> > On Thu, 30 Dec 2004 19:03:04 -0000, Coy Hilton
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > >
> > >
> > > Yep, Use a Opamp mixer followed by a audio PA
> > chip. You can build
> > > the mixer real cheap and depending on how much
> > audio power that you
> > > need that can be had cheap too. Some audio PA
> > chips now drive the
> > > speaker BTL ( neither side grounded... the speaker
> > is driven
> > > differentially ) You'r lucky that you didn't smoke
> > one or both Audio
> > > PAs in the radios. Not only were you driving the
> > attached speaker
> > > but, you were back driving the other radios audio
> > output section.
> > > Oh, you'll also need to load both radio outputs
> > with a resister of 8
> > > or ten ohms.
> > > 73
> > > AC0Y
> > >
> > > --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, DCFluX
> > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > Anyone had experience with mixing the speaker
> > output of 2 radios,
> > > Say
> > > > Motorola GM300's to one speaker?
> > > >
> > > > I originally tried a couple of resistors but I
> > may have the wrong
> > > > values as they got hot as hell and one started
> > smoking, I was
> > > using 2
> > > > .82 ohm at 2 watt resistors for each radio, one
> > resistor in each
> > > > speaker lead and at the center the speaker.  My
> > next best guess is
> > > > using a multiple winding transformer with three
> > windings of 4 ohms,
> > > > but finding information on how to wind a
> > transformer to do that is
> > > > impossible these days.  Any Ideas?
> > >
> 
> 
> 
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