this post was submitted on 20 Feb 2024
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My solution to the same problem was to disassemble the echo. Take the speaker output and wire it to a cheap amplifier (adafruit pam8302), and then wire that to a larger speaker in a 3d printed enclosure.
Only thing I wish I did was wire the shutdown pin to one of the extra pins on the echo to turn off the amplifier when nothing is being sent to the speaker.
This sounds cool, but beyond my skill set. I might be able to re-qire the speaker wire to something else (possibly not if soldering is required), but I don't even understand what a "shutdown pin" is or what it does.
The amplifier has 7 connections. Input+ Input- Shutdown Power Ground Speaker out+ Speaker out-
You'll have to cut or solder the wires to the original speaker, then solder wires or pins to the amplifier,
It's not extremely difficult, but daunting if you've not done it before.
If you want to try, and need a lifeline feel free to DM me