J
Jonathan Epstein
Guest
I have a Treo 600, which includes MP3 player capability. I would like
to plug it into the auxiliary jack on my car stereo via a patch
cable, but there's a technical problem where the Treo mis-detects my 6
foot cable (I would prefer a shorter cable and used to have one about
8 inches long) as a microphone and won't emit sound over that cable.
It turns out that the Treo will intentionally avoid emitting sound
over the cable if it detects a resistance load in the 500-3000 ohm
range.
I went to measure the resistance of the 6' cable last night, but
couldn't find my multimeter.
So my questions are:
(1) do you have any idea what the resistance of a 6' stereo cable is
likely to be?
(2) do you have any idea what the resistance of a 8" stereo cable is
likely to be? (I might try to find & buy another)
(3) what added resistance load is my car stereo likely to add when the
other end of the cable is inserted into the stereo? Disclaimer: I
don't have a detailed understanding of how all this might interact
with car electrical system, chassis, etc.
Ideally I would like to make this work using a short cable and make
the load under 500 ohms, but in an extreme case I could consider using
a very long cable and/or a resistor to force the load over 3000 ohms.
I don't know what the latter would do to my sound quality.
Details from two message board postings appear below. The first
message describes my initial statement of the problem, and the second
describes the information that I got from the manufacturer.
Many thanks,
Jonathan
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://discussion.treocentral.com/tcforum/showthread.php?t=59985
I have a related question. Both my cars' stereos have a front panel
auxiliary input jack (I bought them this way intentionally), and I
have used them in the past with my Olympus DM-1 MP3 player and a 3.5mm
male<->male stereo similar to this:
http://www.mycableshop.com/sku/CSTEREO-01.htm?x=28&y=11
Unfortunately I misplaced that cable, and went to Radio Shack last
night and bought a replacement. Like the picture above, the ends of
this cable visually match the tip of my mini-stereo headphones which I
have used successfully with my Treo 600 and the Treo's elbow-shaped
stereo adapter (palmOne Treo 600 Stereo Headphone Adapter).
Now, for the mystery: I started up ptunes playing some music, and as
one would expect there is no sound coming out of the Treo's speaker.
Then I inserted the elbow-adapter, and again no sound comes out. Then
I inserted the patch cable into the elbow-adapter, and to my great
surprise sound came out of the Treo's speaker. I was unable to get
sound to come out of the car stereo!
While this is a nice trick to get ptunes to play over the Treo's
speaker, this is not what I wanted!
I need to go back and double-check that this new cable works with my
Olympus DM-1 and the car stereo, but I suspect that it will.
Has anyone encountered this situation and a solution for it? An
explanation of this phenomenon would also be helpful.
To clarify, I misplaced the working cable before receiving my 600 a
few weeks ago, so I have never tested the Treo in combination with the
working cable. But then again, I think that the new cable is
electrically identical to the old one.
[] [] [] []
jae_63
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[] Yesterday, 12:02 PM #19
jae_63
Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 2
[] followup to car stereo using patch cable
I would've just linked to this, but couldn't figure out how. I got
this information by starting an email support request on the Palm
website.
It looks like I need to measure my cable's resistance and see whether
it's in the 500-3000 ohm range.
Thanks in advance for any other low-cost suggestions.
-----------------------------------------
Solution ID: 29888
Where sounds will route with Treo 600 when using headsets and
connecting to amplifiers
The Treo smartphone can play MP3 music through an accessory stereo
headset (how to play MP3 music on Treo). Please keep in mind that
while MP3 music sounds great on a Treo smartphone, we consciously
designed the Treo to work as a phone first, and a media player second.
Therefore, we optimized the sound routing for telephone functions.
When using a mono telephone headset (such as the one included in the
box with your Treo smartphone), ringtones, alerts and media sounds
such as MP3 music will be sent to the rear speaker on your handset.
The sound from the phone conversation is sent to the headset earpiece.
It is not possible to route ringtones, alerts and media sounds to the
headset only.
When using a stereo headset (such as the optional stereo headset
accessory for Treo smartphones), the ringtones and alerts are mixed
with whatever media sound is playing, and those ringtones and alerts
play through the stereo headset. If you make a call, the phone
conversation is routed through the built-in handset microphone and
receiver speaker. Stereo headsets do not carry the audio from the
phone call.
What if the sound still comes from the rear speaker when I plug in a
headset or cable?
Some audio devices connected to Treo 600 may be misinterpreted by the
automatic detection mechanism as a mono telephony headset.
This affects how the Treo handles calls while a device is plugged into
the socket. Some active circuits in speakers or headphones present in
the same way as a microphone (if their impedance is from 3,000 Ohms to
500 Ohms). In order to avoid possibly blowing a microphone, any
ringtones, alerts or media player sound will still route to the
built-in rear speaker on the Treo 600.
If you use noise canceling headphones, turn off the noise cancellation
or turn it to a lower setting to remedy the issue.
If you are using a line-out cable to another piece of equipment,
please be aware that we do not directly support this activity and
cannot provide technical support to make this possible. With that in
mind, you might be interested to know that most equipment will happily
work with Treo 600 output. If it fails, you may need to use an
intermediate piece of audio routing equipment that is "seen" correctly
by Treo 600. There is no software switch to make this possible.
For example, if you use an MP3 transmitter in your car such as the
iRock, the Treo may not send the audio correctly thru the iRock. Other
transmitters may appear correctly to the Treo 600.
Trial and error is the best method of achieving success as each active
circuit device presents a different impedance to the Treo 600.
to plug it into the auxiliary jack on my car stereo via a patch
cable, but there's a technical problem where the Treo mis-detects my 6
foot cable (I would prefer a shorter cable and used to have one about
8 inches long) as a microphone and won't emit sound over that cable.
It turns out that the Treo will intentionally avoid emitting sound
over the cable if it detects a resistance load in the 500-3000 ohm
range.
I went to measure the resistance of the 6' cable last night, but
couldn't find my multimeter.
So my questions are:
(1) do you have any idea what the resistance of a 6' stereo cable is
likely to be?
(2) do you have any idea what the resistance of a 8" stereo cable is
likely to be? (I might try to find & buy another)
(3) what added resistance load is my car stereo likely to add when the
other end of the cable is inserted into the stereo? Disclaimer: I
don't have a detailed understanding of how all this might interact
with car electrical system, chassis, etc.
Ideally I would like to make this work using a short cable and make
the load under 500 ohms, but in an extreme case I could consider using
a very long cable and/or a resistor to force the load over 3000 ohms.
I don't know what the latter would do to my sound quality.
Details from two message board postings appear below. The first
message describes my initial statement of the problem, and the second
describes the information that I got from the manufacturer.
Many thanks,
Jonathan
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://discussion.treocentral.com/tcforum/showthread.php?t=59985
I have a related question. Both my cars' stereos have a front panel
auxiliary input jack (I bought them this way intentionally), and I
have used them in the past with my Olympus DM-1 MP3 player and a 3.5mm
male<->male stereo similar to this:
http://www.mycableshop.com/sku/CSTEREO-01.htm?x=28&y=11
Unfortunately I misplaced that cable, and went to Radio Shack last
night and bought a replacement. Like the picture above, the ends of
this cable visually match the tip of my mini-stereo headphones which I
have used successfully with my Treo 600 and the Treo's elbow-shaped
stereo adapter (palmOne Treo 600 Stereo Headphone Adapter).
Now, for the mystery: I started up ptunes playing some music, and as
one would expect there is no sound coming out of the Treo's speaker.
Then I inserted the elbow-adapter, and again no sound comes out. Then
I inserted the patch cable into the elbow-adapter, and to my great
surprise sound came out of the Treo's speaker. I was unable to get
sound to come out of the car stereo!
While this is a nice trick to get ptunes to play over the Treo's
speaker, this is not what I wanted!
I need to go back and double-check that this new cable works with my
Olympus DM-1 and the car stereo, but I suspect that it will.
Has anyone encountered this situation and a solution for it? An
explanation of this phenomenon would also be helpful.
To clarify, I misplaced the working cable before receiving my 600 a
few weeks ago, so I have never tested the Treo in combination with the
working cable. But then again, I think that the new cable is
electrically identical to the old one.
[] [] [] []
jae_63
View Public Profile
Send a private message to jae_63
Find More Posts by jae_63
Add jae_63 to Your Buddy List
[] Yesterday, 12:02 PM #19
jae_63
Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 2
[] followup to car stereo using patch cable
I would've just linked to this, but couldn't figure out how. I got
this information by starting an email support request on the Palm
website.
It looks like I need to measure my cable's resistance and see whether
it's in the 500-3000 ohm range.
Thanks in advance for any other low-cost suggestions.
-----------------------------------------
Solution ID: 29888
Where sounds will route with Treo 600 when using headsets and
connecting to amplifiers
The Treo smartphone can play MP3 music through an accessory stereo
headset (how to play MP3 music on Treo). Please keep in mind that
while MP3 music sounds great on a Treo smartphone, we consciously
designed the Treo to work as a phone first, and a media player second.
Therefore, we optimized the sound routing for telephone functions.
When using a mono telephone headset (such as the one included in the
box with your Treo smartphone), ringtones, alerts and media sounds
such as MP3 music will be sent to the rear speaker on your handset.
The sound from the phone conversation is sent to the headset earpiece.
It is not possible to route ringtones, alerts and media sounds to the
headset only.
When using a stereo headset (such as the optional stereo headset
accessory for Treo smartphones), the ringtones and alerts are mixed
with whatever media sound is playing, and those ringtones and alerts
play through the stereo headset. If you make a call, the phone
conversation is routed through the built-in handset microphone and
receiver speaker. Stereo headsets do not carry the audio from the
phone call.
What if the sound still comes from the rear speaker when I plug in a
headset or cable?
Some audio devices connected to Treo 600 may be misinterpreted by the
automatic detection mechanism as a mono telephony headset.
This affects how the Treo handles calls while a device is plugged into
the socket. Some active circuits in speakers or headphones present in
the same way as a microphone (if their impedance is from 3,000 Ohms to
500 Ohms). In order to avoid possibly blowing a microphone, any
ringtones, alerts or media player sound will still route to the
built-in rear speaker on the Treo 600.
If you use noise canceling headphones, turn off the noise cancellation
or turn it to a lower setting to remedy the issue.
If you are using a line-out cable to another piece of equipment,
please be aware that we do not directly support this activity and
cannot provide technical support to make this possible. With that in
mind, you might be interested to know that most equipment will happily
work with Treo 600 output. If it fails, you may need to use an
intermediate piece of audio routing equipment that is "seen" correctly
by Treo 600. There is no software switch to make this possible.
For example, if you use an MP3 transmitter in your car such as the
iRock, the Treo may not send the audio correctly thru the iRock. Other
transmitters may appear correctly to the Treo 600.
Trial and error is the best method of achieving success as each active
circuit device presents a different impedance to the Treo 600.