Ad
News

New Airport Express makes sweet music

Published on June 07, 2004

Apple has unveiled a new wireless-networking base station Airport Express that can be used with AirTunes music networking software to stream music from the Mac to a home hi-fi. Read more

Apple Airport Express gets draft-n Wi-Fi

Published on March 18, 2008

Apple’s mobile Wi-Fi base station Airport Express has been upgraded from 802.11g to draft 802.11n, which, according to the manufacturer, boosts the available bandwidth by “up to” 5x. Read more

Apple upgrades AirPort Extreme Wi-Fi security

Published on October 31, 2003

Apple has updated its AirPort WLAN client and base-station software to add support for the Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA) security protocol. Read more

Beam music from your Ipod to your stero with Belkin's TuneStage II

Published on October 11, 2006

Belkin announced a new version of its TuneStage Bluetooth music system which beams music to home stereo systems. The TuneStage II uses a small transmitter on the Ipod and a receiver that is wired to stereo system. Users can search their playlists, adjust volume and play music from up to 30 feet away from the receiver. Read more

Last Reviews & Articles

Power Supply Roundup: Part II

Published on November 07, 2008

In Part I of our power supply roundup, we went through five mainstream PSUs rated at up to 700 W. Round two sees us tackle another seven mid-range units in an effort to determine which power supply deserves your attention. Read more

Roundup: The Best Overclocking Software

Published on November 06, 2008

Interested in overclocking but not quite sure where to start? We round up some of our favorite software utilities for tweaking processors, memory, graphics, and chipsets. Read more

Tom's Holiday Buyer's Guide 2008, Part 1

Published on November 05, 2008

Welcome to the first installment in our six-part Tom's Holiday Buyer's Guide. In Part 1, two beautiful models help showcase some of our favorite no-hassle hardware gifts for 2008. Read more

Round Up: Five Powerful, Light Ultraportables

Published on November 05, 2008

Executives, road warriors, and gadget geeks all lust after ultraportable notebooks. Five of these amazing machines battle it out in this roundup. Read more

  Tom's Hardware UK and Ireland Forums » Audio » Audio Technology » using car stereo as a compact receiver for airport express..
 

using car stereo as a compact receiver for airport express..

Advanced Search

There are 346 identified and unidentified users. To see the list of identified users, Click here



Word :   Username :  
 
Bottom
Author
 Thread : using car stereo as a compact receiver for airport express..
 
More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

I want to drive two pairs of Monitor speakers from a single AM/FM
receiver with a single input (AirPort Express) in a compact space.

A friend suggested something I thought rather clever -- a car stereo. A
higher end car stereo will deliver enough power for our relatively
modest needs and it could even include a CD player or even cassette
player (though neither are necessary). The AE's analog output would go
into the analog input jack of the car stereo (though sometimes we'd
probably use an iPod instead).

There are even separate volume controls that could output to the two
rooms.

My questions are:

1. Any obvious problems here? We're talking 192 kpbs AAC encoded music
-- so not high fidelity.

2. I'd need a 120V to 12V converter that supplied quite a bit of
current. I'd also need some sort of enclosure. I'm quite lazy. Are
these available anywhere as a kit?

Thanks,

john
jfaughnan@spamcop.net

meta: jfaughnan, jgfaughnan, audio, home, stereo, two room, compact,
apple, streaming

Related Product

Register or log in to remove.

More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

jfaughnan wrote ...
>I want to drive two pairs of Monitor speakers from a single AM/FM
> receiver with a single input (AirPort Express) in a compact space.
>
> A friend suggested something I thought rather clever -- a car stereo.
> A
> higher end car stereo will deliver enough power for our relatively
> modest needs and it could even include a CD player or even cassette
> player (though neither are necessary). The AE's analog output would go
> into the analog input jack of the car stereo (though sometimes we'd
> probably use an iPod instead).
>
> There are even separate volume controls that could output to the two
> rooms.
>
> My questions are:
>
> 1. Any obvious problems here?

The most obvious one is: What possible advantage is a
car stereo over a domestic-style "boom box", compact
stereo system, etc. etc.

> 2. I'd need a 120V to 12V converter that supplied quite a bit of
> current. I'd also need some sort of enclosure. I'm quite lazy. Are
> these available anywhere as a kit?

They are available off the shelf. But why on earth bother
with such stuff when you can buy equipment designed for
home use?

More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

Boom boxen don't drive remote speakers -- most won't work with external
speakers at all and many don't accept inputs. If you know a decent one
that would work though that would be great.

I'd love a compact stereo receiver that could drive remote speakers!! I
just haven't been able to find one on the market. Sorry, I should have
made that clear. I've looked in various stores, web sites, etc -- all
the receivers seems to be sized for a standard cabinet. Any
suggestions?

jfaughnan@spamcop.net
meta: jfaughnan, jgfaughnan, stereo, compact, AirPort Express, small
size

More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

jfaughnan wrote ...
> Boom boxen don't drive remote speakers -- most won't work with
> external
> speakers at all and many don't accept inputs. If you know a decent one
> that would work though that would be great.

I guess I'm cornfused. I thought you wanted the devices
(car radios, or whatever) AS the remote speakers? Sorry.

More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

The music is on my iMac. The controls are on my iBook. The music
streams digitally from iMac to AirPort Express via 802.11g. The AirPort
Express does D/A conversion and outputs analog to the receiver, the
receiver send analog signals to the local and distal speakers.

I'd use a regular receiver, but I want to use small speakers and a
small receiver. Hard to find anything these days that's compact!

john

More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

<jfaughnan@spamcop.net> wrote in message
news:1126619805.984456.163430@g43g2000cwa.googlegroups.com
> I want to drive two pairs of Monitor speakers from a
> single AM/FM receiver with a single input (AirPort
> Express) in a compact space.
>
> A friend suggested something I thought rather clever -- a
> car stereo. A higher end car stereo will deliver enough
> power for our relatively modest needs and it could even
> include a CD player or even cassette player (though
> neither are necessary). The AE's analog output would go
> into the analog input jack of the car stereo (though
> sometimes we'd probably use an iPod instead).
>
> There are even separate volume controls that could output
> to the two rooms.
>
> My questions are:
>
> 1. Any obvious problems here? We're talking 192 kpbs AAC
> encoded music -- so not high fidelity.
>
> 2. I'd need a 120V to 12V converter that supplied quite a
> bit of current. I'd also need some sort of enclosure. I'm
> quite lazy. Are these available anywhere as a kit?

You can get more sound for the buck with low cost stereo
receivers.

More Information

Archived from groups: rec.audio.tech (More info?)

 

> You can get more sound for the buck with low cost stereo receivers.

Sure -- but I can't find a small one. Any recommendations?


  Tom's Hardware UK and Ireland Forums » Audio » Audio Technology » using car stereo as a compact receiver for airport express..

Go to:
 

Google ads