ok to start. I rescued this chip from the trash, when i friend of mine accidently stepped on his chip. so thats why its a little frankenstien, but it works.
Notice the position of the chip one row of pins on one side of the breadboard, the other on the other side of the seam. The seam splits the rows.
As you can see the little orange and yellow wires are my jumpers. I had some premade ones from my electronic club days. but you can make your own with some solid core wire! not the twisted wire. The orange on the right go to the positive column of holes! As you can see from the yellow wires, They go from the Negative column across the gap. And tie into the last pin on the left. Thus completing the circuit. I chose to come from the right. but you can flip i did, but it would be a little more complicated if your not used to working with a bread board.
ok here is a mock up of what your going to do. I am not ready to install this yet and wanted to get back to you as soon as could.
First on top, you can notice my battery pack wires going into the + and - columns. That provides power for every hole in that column.
Second. Look on the left. Notice the two wires going into the breadboard. Those are your audio out on your chip. They are tied into the chip by the board. Easiest way for me to explain. in the middle of the board. Power is shared in each row. on the sides power is shared in the column. So i put the positive wire going to the amp in the same row as the pin on the chip
that is the positive out. pin 9. And then for the audio negitive wire. I place that a row down for the #10 pin on the chip.
Third. look on the right. See the black wire going to pin 19? that would be your positive wire going to your toggle switch for the power on sound. Now look down. Notice the other black wire. That will be your Negative wire on your toggle or the wire coming form the middle pin on your switch.
ok lets take a quick look at the amp.
Most of it is self explanatory for speaker and the power. However here is what i mean for the win pin. Notice on the amp there is a wire on the pin next to the potentiometer (volume control) that is your negative coming from the breadboard. Then there is a positive pin next to it. Dont use that. instead go left to were the other wire is shown. it should be labed WIN on the board its self. That is where your positive wire from your breadboard gets soldered to.
I hope that explains it. just let me know if you need any more help. big thing to remember is not to use your 12v power on your chip and everything else should work out fine.