Warning: While this a relatively easy modification, it involves taking your Amazon Echo apart and doing something that’s definitely not intended. You are fully responsible if your break your Echo or external speakers.

Preparation

You’ll need:

2x JST 2-pin cable: https://www.adafruit.com/products/261 ($1.50)

1x 3.5mm Audio Jack Terminal Block https://www.adafruit.com/products/2791 ($2.50)

You’ll also need a T10 Torx Screwdriver to open up the Echo, but no soldering is needed!

Opening up the Echo

Start by peeling off the rubber foot in the bottom of the device.

This will expose the four T10 Torx screws that you would need to remove.

After the Torx screws have been removed, you will get to a circuit board that contains the internal amplifier and some other nifty things.

See the black and white JST connectors? One of them goes up to the internal tweeter and the other goes up to the internal subwoofer.

We’re going to hijack these connectors and have them output to our own speaker instead.

Now, I will straight up admit that this is a dirty dirty hack, but all we’re going to do now is to connect our own JST 2-pin connectors to these and wire them out to our stereo 3.5mm audio jack, with one channel getting the pre-mixed tweeter output and the other channel getting the pre-mixed subwoofer output.

Make sure to check the polarity on the existing connectors so you don’t get ground and L/R mixed up. Unfortunately the color coding of the cables won’t match exactly when we insert our own JST connectors.

Here’s what it looks like:

Now, wire up the 3.5mm jack terminal block using the diagram above, and the nifty icons on top of the terminal block itself.

All we have left now is to pack it all up, wrap it in a nice package, and test it out with some simple external speakers.

I put together a simple 3D-printed stand, with a built-in slot for the audio-out connector. You can download the design on GitHub.

Connecting with Sonos

The last step for my project was to use the Sonos speakers as external speakers. I did this with a Sonos Connect (on a related note, why on earth is that device so expensive?).

The Connect allows me to stream any physical audio-in source to the Sonos network — it could just as well have been a record or CD player.

Conclusion

I can now say “Alexa, play Daft Punk on Spotify” and enjoy French electronic music throughout the entire house instead of just the kitchen where the Amazon Echo is located.

We’ve been running with this setup for about a week now, and everything seems to be running smoothly. The only issue is that the audio will start tearing up if we turn the Alexa volume past 5 — but this is easily resolved by adjusting the volume on the Sonos system rather than the Amazon Echo device itself. I think that this might be happening because the output from the Amazon Echo is pre-amplified.

In the future, it could be neat to pair this with an Amazon Echo Remote, which would allow us to not only listen to the Echo anywhere, but also control it from anywhere.