Radio's MP3 port
#1
Radio's MP3 port
Hi all! New guy here.
This is my fourth Honda, first hybrid.
All of 22 hours old.
Got a totally non-hybrid question......
How would you "feed" music into the mp3 port?
Does it really require an mp3 digital file? or is it just an aux input?
ooop..... guess that was 3 questions.
Thanks!
This is my fourth Honda, first hybrid.
All of 22 hours old.
Got a totally non-hybrid question......
How would you "feed" music into the mp3 port?
Does it really require an mp3 digital file? or is it just an aux input?
ooop..... guess that was 3 questions.
Thanks!
#2
Re: Radio's MP3 port
Congratulations on your new HCHII. To answer your question(s), it's just a 1/8" aux input jack. You can plug in anything from a portable tape player to an mp3 player (iPod or any other make), or a playstation if you have the L/R RCA to 1/8" line jack cable. Just plug your unit into the aux jack and press the XM/AUX button on the radio. All controls of the unit will have to be done from the device itself, not the radio in the HCH.
#3
Re: Radio's MP3 port
You'll need the following type of cable:
Plug one end into your MP3 player headphone port, and the other into the auxiliary input of the HCHII, located near the cigarette lighter in the center console area. Switch the head unit to AUX, adjust volume on both your MP3 player and the car, and enjoy.
Plug one end into your MP3 player headphone port, and the other into the auxiliary input of the HCHII, located near the cigarette lighter in the center console area. Switch the head unit to AUX, adjust volume on both your MP3 player and the car, and enjoy.
#4
Re: Radio's MP3 port
You'll need the following type of cable:
Plug one end into your MP3 player headphone port, and the other into the auxiliary input of the HCHII, located near the cigarette lighter in the center console area. Switch the head unit to AUX, adjust volume on both your MP3 player and the car, and enjoy.
Plug one end into your MP3 player headphone port, and the other into the auxiliary input of the HCHII, located near the cigarette lighter in the center console area. Switch the head unit to AUX, adjust volume on both your MP3 player and the car, and enjoy.
#5
Re: Radio's MP3 port
Darn it: I'm currently overseas and can't make a video of the process to show you. Can anybody help Tom out?
As a note, you should make sure that your head unit reads AUX when you switch it to Auxiliary Mode, and that you turn the HCHII's volume up quite a lot (around level 30). Then slowly increase your MP3 player's volume from 0 and find the perfect level to enjoy. The reason why you'd do this is because the amplifier in the head unit is much better than the one in most MP3s, especially the iPod.
As a note, you should make sure that your head unit reads AUX when you switch it to Auxiliary Mode, and that you turn the HCHII's volume up quite a lot (around level 30). Then slowly increase your MP3 player's volume from 0 and find the perfect level to enjoy. The reason why you'd do this is because the amplifier in the head unit is much better than the one in most MP3s, especially the iPod.
#6
Re: Radio's MP3 port
Darn it: I'm currently overseas and can't make a video of the process to show you. Can anybody help Tom out?
As a note, you should make sure that your head unit reads AUX when you switch it to Auxiliary Mode, and that you turn the HCHII's volume up quite a lot (around level 30). Then slowly increase your MP3 player's volume from 0 and find the perfect level to enjoy. The reason why you'd do this is because the amplifier in the head unit is much better than the one in most MP3s, especially the iPod.
As a note, you should make sure that your head unit reads AUX when you switch it to Auxiliary Mode, and that you turn the HCHII's volume up quite a lot (around level 30). Then slowly increase your MP3 player's volume from 0 and find the perfect level to enjoy. The reason why you'd do this is because the amplifier in the head unit is much better than the one in most MP3s, especially the iPod.
Thanks for all your good advice.
#7
Re: Radio's MP3 port
Just be careful to turn the volume back down again after you park - in case you forget and switch to radio or CD and blow your ears off that's happened a couple times to me..
There's also an option on the HCH radio for automatic speed-adaptive volume control. Basically as you drive faster, the volume automatically increases to overcome the road-noise. You can choose to activate or deactivate this feature based on your own preference.
#8
Re: Radio's MP3 port
I knew that the HCH had this, but i did not know it was an option. How does one activate/deactivate this? I have no idea whether I'm using it or not. I assumed I was, but I do not hear a difference in sound levels at different speeds. I had assumed that was the point and it all just evened out so I didn't know that it was doing it. Did that even make sense?
#9
Re: Radio's MP3 port
I knew that the HCH had this, but i did not know it was an option. How does one activate/deactivate this? I have no idea whether I'm using it or not. I assumed I was, but I do not hear a difference in sound levels at different speeds. I had assumed that was the point and it all just evened out so I didn't know that it was doing it. Did that even make sense?
Yea, that's the point: you don't notice the volume fluctuating because it self-adjusts (to some degree). I'm sorry I don't remember how to adjust it right now, and I'm overseas, so you'll have to look in your manual in the radio section.
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