English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

All I have is a CD player in my new van (Mazda MPV). I have to play my cassettes into this. Is there a way? Alternatively, what is the best way to convert cassettes into mp3? Please let me know.

2007-02-05 01:24:47 · 6 answers · asked by Nat 1 in Cars & Transportation Car Audio

6 answers

You could use a universal FM adapter. This item plugs into any standard headphone jack and broadcasts over FM. Can be used with ANY MP3 player, cassette, CD, etc.

These items are portable and can be easily moved from car to car.

Belkin makes a nice one for about $40. TuneCast® II FM Transmitter. Part Number F8V3080. It can be purchased from the Belkin website or most on-line electronic websites.

There are also several other similar devices made by different companies.

2007-02-05 01:40:17 · answer #1 · answered by Mad Jack 7 · 0 1

Yes, there are audio adapters available. There's one called Sound Feeder. It's a wireless audio adapter. You can plug it into any headphone jack. What you do is, you put your car stereo to an empty station and you put the sound feeder to the same station. Now, you can get your tape player, cd player, mp3 player, laptop, whatever, to play through your car stereo.

2007-02-05 01:32:50 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

why don't you get a CD player with a AUX output, plug in to the cassette player tough the AUX to the CD player give you a better quality then the cassette player with the cord, that what my mom have in her car, she don't really care, I mean thats ok, I have the USB and AUX, with the best and loudest sound system in my neighbor. This is just a suggestion. nothing else.

2016-05-24 17:54:46 · answer #3 · answered by Heather 4 · 0 0

You need a 3.5mm stereo to stereo plug cable, & the free recording & editing program Audacity. Plug the cable into the headphones socket of your tape player, & the other end into the microphone socket of your PC. Then play the tape & click on Record in Audacity, when the track is finished, click Stop. Then Click on export to wav file. To reduce the huge file size without losing quality import the exported recordings that you make into itunes & convert them to mp3.

Or if your CD Player has a 3.5mm stereo input socket in it, plug the stereo to stereo plug cable into your tape player's headphone socket & the CD Player's 3.5mm stereo input socket.

2007-02-05 01:32:15 · answer #4 · answered by garlicjnr2001 3 · 0 0

I found the best thing since sliced bread...http://www.crutchfield.com/S-CxeL1swpz8h/cgi-bin/prodview.asp?i=142FMMOD01

It's not wireless.

It feeds your audio signal from a headphone jack ( or RCA cables) by FM modulation, directly into the antenna input on your radio bypassing the antenna when on, allowing the radio to work as normal when off. It comes with an On/Off switch that can used or it can be replaced with a relay powered by the remote wire from the radio.

This is the answer. Totally versatile.

2007-02-05 02:46:57 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

probably, but if you're going to go through that trouble, you should convert your cassettes using your computer and audio inputs and just burn everything onto CD

2007-02-05 04:57:41 · answer #6 · answered by currious 4 · 2 0

fedest.com, questions and answers