How do I bypass the speaker in my dancing water speakers?

Hello. I’m a young music producer and I recently got some dancing water speakers for Christmas. They look great and perfectly match the aesthetic of my studio. Problem is, the sound quality is garbage compared to the expensive speakers I already have. 

It is for this reason that I am taking the water speakers apart to try to remove the speaker itself. The water reacts to the sound and I still want it to do this, but I’m afraid that just ripping out the speaker (cutting the green and yellow wires) will result in it not doing so. Would this work? This was a gift from my little brother and I don’t want to ruin it. What do I need to do?

P.s. the two white things were plugged into each other. Also this is the left speaker. The right one is more complex but essentially the same.

Anonymous2020-01-04T16:24:15Z

As you know, speaker drivers only require 2 wires, a positive and a negative wire. As you can see there are 3 wires that go to the white plug (red yellow and blue). Or is there a fourth wire that is black. You can trace the wires and see which ones go to the speakers. Then you can cut those 2 wires and connect them to new speaker drivers. Cut the wire as close to the speaker as possible to give you more wire to work with. That should work. However, depending on how the speakers are powered, there may not be enough power to drive the new speaker drivers you install. You also need to reconnect the 2 white plugs.

spacemissing2020-01-04T04:14:05Z

Water speakers are junk novelty devices. 
   
No matter how much fun they are, 
such things don't belong in a professional environment.     
Nor do colour organs or other non-calibrated displays.