No a subwoofer cannot typically be used as a regular speaker. Subwoofers are designed to produce only low-frequency sound waves (i. e. bass notes and sounds) in order to produce a rich, full-bodied sound. Firstof all, it places the front right and left speaker at different heights which will have deleterious effects on the sound stage. Second, it will be awfully tipsy to place a tower speaker on a subwoofer. It's not a big deal with bookshelf speakers, but I wouldn't so it with a tower. Thereare options available with this subwoofer amplifier that could fulfill all your needs and more. A great option is the mono amplifier which comes with two dual mono subwoofers. This means that there is a one-channel subwoofer that produces low-level sounds and the other one produces high-level sounds. This arrangement makes it possible for Buthere's a workaround: the super small, $50 freeDa attaches to the 30-pin connector of your old speaker dock, turning it into a Bluetooth 4.0-compatible speaker. Sure, you can't use your dock to Sincethe subwoofer can be placed just about anywhere, be sure to decide on subwoofer placement before you enter in the distance for that speaker. If you use the auto-setup feature of your receiver, you'll find that the subwoofer distance setting is often not representative of where the subwoofer is in the room. Can I use wireless wvqVoBv.

can any speaker be used as a subwoofer