iPod in my car!

I've been wanting to get an iPod for quite a while, finally I've saved enough money to pay my bills off and get myself an iPod, however there's one thing which is stoping me to buy one right now which is;
I spend most of my time driving, my car has a CD player only, (Not tape player), so I was wondering, is there any way to be able to connect the iPod to my car radio, without having to buy a new radio with a tape player?

Cheers
God Bless

Posted on Aug 26, 2005 4:01 PM

Reply
11 replies

Aug 26, 2005 6:08 PM in response to MacWizard

There definitely is a way to play your iPod in your car. I do it currently. Go to Target and buy an FM transmitter for iPods. They have them available for iPods and iPod Minis. They run between $25 and $40. You want to make sure you get one with reasonable transmitting quality. I bought the $25 iTrip at Target a week ago. The transmitting is bad, to be honest. Lots of squelch. Maybe though, it's because I live in Los Angeles. Who knows. I am thinking about taking bit back and upgrading to the $40 one, to see if there is a difference. If anybody has more feedback on which transmitter to buy, let me know! Thanks! And I hope this helps!

Aug 26, 2005 7:32 PM in response to MacWizard

b Various Methods to Connect to a Car Stereo System, or Listen to Your iPod in the Vehicle

b Best:
Direct connection via the dock connector or headphone jack of your iPod, to the mini-jack input (or AUX RCA input jacks) of your car stereo. Not many low/moderate-end cars have this feature yet, but it is becoming more popular. Some aftermarket auto stereo units may have this feature.

There are also some after-market, moderate to fairly expensive direct interfaces, that hook into your existing car stereo to provide a high-quality, direct connection. Most will also power/charge the iPod. Pretty slick, but can be pricey ($80-$300). If money is no object, a clean way to go. Not very portable from car to car – if at all.
http://logjamelectronics.com/ipodproducts.html
http://www.myradiostore.us/auxadapters/blitzsafe/blitzsafe-m-link-ipod-interface .html
http://www.theistore.com/ipod2car.html
http://www.mp3yourcar.com/

b Better:
Connect your iPod to a cassette adaptor and play your tunes through your car's cassette player. Some new cars no longer come with a cassette player, so it may not be an option. It will provide even better audio quality if you can run the audio feed out of the dock connector (see the SendStation link below). Can be portable between cars that have a cassette player and also be used in your home cassette system.

b Good:
Attach an FM transmitter to your iPod and play the tunes through an unused FM station. Convenient, but wireless FM transmitter signals are susceptible to static and outside interference, and can vary in strength and quality depending on your location. Some noticeable degradation and distortion, depending on the quality of the transmitter, the sensitivity of your ears and the airwave congestion in your area. Highly portable between cars, and may be used in a home system. FM transmitters that need to be plugged into a DC auto jack may not work in a home environment (without some sort of adaptor).

b Marginal:
Attach an external speaker system to the iPod and play it in the car. Workable, but not too good - unless you spring for a $300+ Bose (or similar) system. But why? Only if your vehicle has no Stereo system, perhaps.

b Brave Techno-Geek:
This site gives some direction on adapting your own car stereo by yourself: http://www.whatsmyip.org/ipodrx8/ . Risky, but it has been successful: Seanski, "silent track" #2, 11:59pm Jul 15, 2005 CDT

Whichever you choose, power the iPod through your car’s DC power -- either from a power adapter, or as part of the combined audio adaptor. Have a method to secure the iPod to the dash/console/etc. See the reviews for all the various accessories at the iLounge

You will also get better audio output if the dock connection plug is used, rather than the headphone jack. See this URL for a novel adaptor: https://www.sendstation.com/us/products/pd_lousb.html. Others types are also available via this site.

I have read positive and negative reviews of each method, and within method there are great variations in performance of different manufacture's systems – and peoples’ opinions of their performance. Some cassette adaptors/FM transmitters work poorly, some better.

FWIW: I have the iTrip Mini & the Newer Technology RoadTrip!+ FM transmitters, a Belkin cassette adaptor (used both with & w/out the PocketDock) and two vehicles with the BlitzSafe direct interface. Using the same song in the same car, I found that the FM transmitters worked, but not as good as the cassette adapter via the headphone jack. Using the PocketDock on the cassette adapter resulted in a significant audio quality improvement. As expected, the Blitzsafe direct connect was exceptionally better than everything else: less tinny, a more warmer/richer sound, and close to true CD quality.

Aug 28, 2005 9:45 PM in response to MacWizard

I got a "podfreq" fm transmitter. your ipod slides right inside of it, it acts like a case with an antenna on the back. it runs off your ipod's battery but comes with an adaptor(plugs into the podfreq's firewire port) it cost like a hundred bucks.

if you get the ipod photo they have 2 models one for ipod and one for photo i dont know what the difference is. ANYWAY i dont know how well something like that will work without knowing your area. if you live in a huge city(LA, Vegas, NYC you might have to disconnect your car antenna to get a clear signal. thats a minor proceedure not permanant lol. but if you google PODFREQ you should find it available..i found mine at comp usa. but i just found it on newegg.com for 73bucks

http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.asp?Submit=Go&DEPA=0&type=&description =podfreq&Category=0&minPrice=&maxPrice=&Go.x=0&Go.y=0

no matter which route you go good listening to your ipod i fell instantly in love with mine.

Aug 29, 2005 11:13 AM in response to MacWizard

Thank you guys for the help, however I don't think I made myself clear. I don't want to listen to radio through my ipod in my car, I want to be able to play the songs on my ipod while driving... as I said before my car doesn't come with a tape player, it only has a cd player, so I just don't know how to be able to play music from in ipod through the speakers in my car!

Some above posted some really helpful links, however they are kind of expensive, perhaps i'd be cheaper to buy a radio/tape player for my car and get the "blank" tape to conect to my ipod!

Well I'll keep looking I guess.
Once again, Thank you!
God Bless

Aug 29, 2005 11:55 AM in response to MacWizard

Alejandro,

You were quite clear, and your questions were answered several times over. Re-read the posts above. All of them give you info to connect your iPod
i to
the car stereo and play its tunes via your car speakers.

None of them allow you to listen to the radio through the iPod.

If you do not have a cassette player, then your options are to use an FM
i Transmitter
solution or a direct interface (purchased of self-fabricated). This will get your iPod's audio to the car stereo head unit, and then to the car speakers.

You can spend a little $$ for a cheap FM Transmitter that may or may not sound moderately good (or worse), you can spend up to $50-70 for an FM Transmitter that will sound OK, or you can spend $80 and install the Blitzsafe interface yourself and get near CD quality music (as good as it can get coming from the iPod). You can also spend even more, and get additional controls via the car stereo.

Make sure you factor in the costs (if applicable) of connecting/powering/charging the iPod if you do not use a direct interface.

You won't be pleased with any of the 'cheap' car stereos, so why even try? Hey, it's your money, time and music, so make your choice and have fun.

Aug 29, 2005 12:42 PM in response to Buegie

Buegie,

You seem to be quite the iPod expert! Could you help me with this issue? Please! Thanks

I began my process by uploading 200 CDs using both my laptop and my desktop at the same time to speed the process. Different CDs are in each library. My thought was that I could combine the libraries to make one laibrary after all were uploaded and then upload to iPod. Uploading to computers is now complete, but I'm not sure if combining Libraries is possible. Is that possible without deleting anything. Computers are networked.

Aug 29, 2005 1:40 PM in response to MacWizard

I bought the DLO ipod FM transmitter from Best Buy for $100 and it is the greatest thing in the world. Of course, the AUX hookup would be better. The sound quality is fine to me, I have bad speakers in my car and this isn't much of an issue for me. But when it comes to static, I have none and I live in Chicago. I have only had to switch my FM station once and it was driving in the middle of nowhere.

I definately recommend this though. Here is the link on Best Buy's website.
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=6285423&type=product&id=1072287118 476

Aug 30, 2005 12:11 AM in response to MacWizard

I use a DLO Transpod FM Transmitter. I bought it for about $75 from eBay and use it daily in my car. Like you, I only have a CD player in my car (no tape deck), and I was weary about buying an FM transmitter due to the possibility of shoddy sound quality. To be honest, I'm completely satisfied with it and couldn't go a day without it. Plus, it's nice to have so much music in your car without having to switch CDs constantly! The sound quality is the best I've heard out of an FM transmitter (I've listened to numerous types/brands that my friends have and hated most of them...) , so if I were you I would buy the FM transmitter - it's the cheapest alternative especially compared to line in/out connections which I didn't want to deal with.

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iPod in my car!

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