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I've just bought an mp3 player and I'd like to be able to listen to it while driving. My truck has a factory-standard CD/cassette/radio setup. What are my options, and what's the best one?

2007-01-22 01:59:55 · 5 answers · asked by MikeTX 3 in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

5 answers

You've got three options without modifying any electricals in your audio system :

1. ) Use of a casette adapter which is basically a casette with an audio input chord. You could buy this MP3 casette adapter at any electronics store for around $10.

2. ) FM transmitter. With this gadget, you could hook up your MP3 player on this and transmit the signal to your FM radio. Make sure to find a good one because some of those cheap ones is not good against interferences. Price range from around $20 to $100. I suggest to use that plugs in your cigarette charger for you not to worry about buying batteries repeatedly. They maybe a bit expensive but worth it in a long run.

3. ) AUX input. If your car stereo has an AUX input then you are lucky. Just buy a aux input cable and connect your mp3 directly to your stereo.

2007-01-22 02:08:51 · answer #1 · answered by cee3pee0 2 · 1 0

The best method is an Aux Input jack on your truck's stereo. If there is one, you can get a 3.5mm audio cable from somewhere like Radio Shack and hook it directly from the headphone jack(3.5mm) to the stereo. If you don't have an aux input jack, you can buy a cassette adapter for about $10, it's a device that goes into a cassette player and has a cable running out of it that you can hook into a headphone jack. Wal-Mart carries them for $10, compared to the $20 most places I've seen charge.

If you don't have either an aux in or cassette player in your car, you can get an FM transmitter. An FM transmitter is a device that can be hooked into an MP3 player or similar device and transmit the audio from it a short distance over FM radio frequencies. It degrades the quality of the audio more than the above two options, and should only be done if neither of the other options are viable.

2007-01-22 02:14:05 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Buy a cassette adapter-they're like $10 at Wal-Mart or similar.

You could buy an iTrip-type device where you plug it into the mp3 player--it works with ones other than iPods--and you set your stereo and the iTrip to an unused radio frequency.

This might help too:
http://www.crutchfield.com/S-K5iBeGEQ3yB/cgi-bin/ProdGroup.asp?search=iPod+adapter+for+car+stereos&osp=&skipvs=T&g=227450

These are direct auxilliary hook-ups, which are the best way to preserve sound quality.

2007-01-22 02:05:44 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

obtainable 3 techniques, you ought to purchase a radio transmitter from any cellular digital shop and hook it up on your mp3 participant and hear it by using your radio. in the adventure that your disk participant has a audio enter sounds like a head telephone jack on the front you will get a audio cable and hook it up by using there . final case motel very just about any deck could have a audio enter on the back of it, you will possibly opt to get somebody who's conscious the thank you to get rid of it to come back there and run a audio cable that ought to run from the back of the participant to the headphone enter on the mp3. primary the least complicated is decision a million or 2.

2016-10-31 23:51:26 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You can but a cassette tape with an attachment that will play your MP3 thru your music system

2007-01-22 02:02:51 · answer #5 · answered by fatherf.lotski 5 · 1 0

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