How do you go around bluetooth connection for your car if it isnβt originally provided?
Good Bluetooth Aux Receivers for the car
Can't help you much.
Bluetooth in a nutshell.
It takes 2 to tango so sender and sink must use the same protocol.
Mandatory is SBC, proprietary codecs like APT-X rewuire explicit support by both sender and sink.
To save bandwidth, Bluetooth used lossy compression. SBC can run at 320 kbs so high bit rate MP3 style.
The sink (receiver) receives the compressed audio. It is expanded to PCM audio, fed into a DAC and the output is amplified.
A bit more about Bluetooth: https://www.thewelltemperedcomputer.com/HW/Bluetooth.htm
Measurements are a bit rare so hard to recommend you a product.
Maybe browse ASR, couple of examples
https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/topping-bc3-review-bluetooth-receiver-bt-codecs.23740/
https://www.audiosciencereview.com/forum/index.php?threads/qudelix-5k-bluetooth-dac-headphone-amp.17386/
More on reddit.comBest portable bluetooth speaker for car with no other system
I've used a UE Roll with 'acceptable' results. As in I was just happy to be able to listen to something in the car. The larger the speaker the happier you'll be
More on reddit.comRecommendations for Bluetooth adapter for car (iPhone XR upgrade)
The Bluetooth devices that I have seen never have good sound quality and tend to always have interference.. the ones that broadcast an FM frequency for the radio to pick up that is. there may be Bluetooth devices that patch through a 3.5mm aux cord but Iβm not sure. I would honestly recommend just buying a lightning to 3.5mm adapter, theyβre less then 10$. Or get a decent aftermarket radio for your car (one with Bluetooth built in) probably 80-120$.
More on reddit.comVideos
So my old car only supports aux and usb. I was wondering if I can use a usb bluetooth adapter for music.
Iβve got a 2010 Golf multifuel thatβs lacking a bluetooth option. What methods do you recommend to go around it?