
Cassettes and tapes have become outdated. Newer audio devices offer better listening experience to the listener. The newer products are innovative and produce appealing sound quality within technological limits. The case in point is car mp3 players. Those are an absolute necessity for cars. The player increases the visual aesthetics of a car along with enhancing the user experience.
We can get these products from indigenous companies as well as from sound moguls like Sony, Panasonic, LG, and Samsung who are from countries outside of the United States of America.
Mp3 is the compressed form of music. For a 256 kbps bit rate music mp3 CD, the data which is required to fit in for a 5 minutes song, is 8 to 12 MB. This, when compared to the corresponding feature an audio CD, is simply amazing. Audio CD is usually track based, so a minute is around 10 MB in size. The same five-minutes would eat up almost 50 MB of storage space. Essentially, one is getting a lot of music in a single CD when creating the CD with his or her favorite mp3s. Nevertheless, the CD clutter is reduced from the dashboard.
Car mp3 players generally come in a wide range to satisfy the buyer. Not all the products boast of similar features. Some offer more features and peculiarities whereas others boast of cheaper, throwaway prices.
Although many mp3 players are on market display for a prospective buyer, still car mp3 players are unique for their durability, longevity, and price. The alternatives are ipods, portable play stations, car mobile mp3 players, etc.
All the models are different although the features are the same for similarly priced products. Qualities which most of the players support are track name and song ID display facility, motorized detachable panels, and heatproof quality. The player’s play menu would contain program, repeat, shuffle, and intro play options.
The ability to play FM and AM stations is an added benefit of car mp3 players. A number of signals and stations are supported. Electronic volume controls along with a user-friendly mute button, EQ preset, clock and auto-memory store form the special features of a player. Some players also have the capability of ISO mounting chassis. USB memories and equalizer designs feature in expensive branded devices.
Some car mp3 players are provided with the capacity to be connected to external speakers. With the help of transmitters and modulators, the player can be connected with USB disk to read audio files stored in those external data drives. The FM transmitter would help in transferring the signal to the car tuner, and outputting from car mp3 player speakers.
The look of a car can greatly be augmented by the help of a sleek looking car mp3 player. If the selection of the player is made in accordance with the interior design of the car then it would help in complementing the overall design.
Car MP3 Player
Victor Epand is an expert consultant for used DVDs, used movies, and used car stereos. You can find the best marketplace for used DVDs, used movies, and used car stereos at these sites for used DVDs, used movies, and car mp3 players, FM, transmitter, USB.
11 Responses
forevertheuni
31|Jul|2009 1you have any decent gps program in that machine?
Wennie
31|Jul|2009 23 Key points to making any media player/ FM modulator set up work:
#1 – MP3 player connected correctly to FM transmitter, usually through headphone jack or dock connection to transmitter
#2 – Find an empty radio frequency (87.9 gets me from Detroit to Atlanta with one interruption in mountains in Tenesee but I can't get to Lansing without changing, go figure!) on your stereo
#3 – Set the FM transmitter to broadcast on that radio station you identifed as blank.
You should be all set, hit play on your mp3 player and the player should play to the transmitter which will broadcast to the blank station and come out of your speakers.
Look at your transmitter and see how it indicates successful transmission, some light up, some display station #.
Good luck!
redneck
31|Jul|2009 3music files from itunes are DRM protected. in order to play them on mp3 players other than ipod and iphone, you need a special program to help remove the protection mechanism and convert the music files to mp3 format. i have been using tuneclone audio converter for quite a long time. it helps to convert protected and unprotected music files with very high quality and at very fast speed.
you can learn more about it from
hxxp://www.tuneclone.com/
if you are interested in it.
frvfilms
31|Jul|2009 4in the future the whole car will be a giant computer , cant wait.
cupofjoe_84
01|Aug|2009 5It's all down to compression rate – you can record MP3s with 4x compression rate, then logically you would get 4 times as many songs as you would on a CD.
Or you could use 44x compression rate, and they would all sound like Pinky & Perky. I guess "something off of Sesame Street" would convey my meaning.
I changed my car (with a 6 CD changer) last year, for a model which had only a dash mount single slot CD. Tedious and dangerous! The cost for a boot mounted changer was excessive, so I was all set to buy an MP3 player -as good as 4 CDs, minimum! Then I spotted that SOME in-car DVD players would play MP3s. Actually they all would play MP3s from CD, but some would play them from DVD…
I laid out £400 on an Alpine DVA9860R – superb!
I have only burned one DVD so far, with 28 CDs on it at 4x compression. I used Roxio to put each CD in it's own folder… to switch folders: press one button, twist the dial, the display shows the name of the next folder. When you reach the one you want, push the dial.
It's been harder identifying a Home Theatre system which will decode MP3s from DVD – but that's another story…
Georgia
01|Aug|2009 6Andrus
01|Aug|2009 7No. Cassette adapters are the best devices to play your mp3s in the car. You don't hear about them much because the industry seems to be trying to push FM transmitters down everybody's throat.
boycie
02|Aug|2009 8Craig H
02|Aug|2009 9fm transmitter
http://www.creative.com/products/mp3/zenvisionm/accessories/
Mike G
02|Aug|2009 10its probably cuz its also a dvd player. my indash dvd player recongnizes the folders but when i play the folder, it can only do 1 and cant go back to choose another 1. it needs the folder options on the stereo, i had 1 of those stereos before and worked fine. just burn them in mp3 form with no folders.
valyncollin
02|Aug|2009 11there should be an adapter plug on your stereo for it, a lot of times it's on the back of the head unit.. hopefully it's on the front, you plug the two together and download it to the head unit.
Leave a reply
Top incoming search terms for this post
Search
Blogroll
Categories
Recent Posts
Tags
A design creation of Design Disease
Copyright © 2009 - iGadget - is proudly powered by WordPress
SEO Powered by Platinum SEO from TechblissonlineInSense 1.0 Theme by Design Disease brought to you by HostGator Web Hosting.