Same here. When you are listening to (let's face it) digitised music that is not lossless in 99% of cases, combined with road noise, Range Rover beeps and other noise then how can tell the difference? I would blind test anybody who contests it and that comes from an electronic engineer with lots of audio experience.

Decent cassette adaptor, clean heads, adjust the levels to suit and the sound is pretty amazing really............ My view anyway,,,,,,,,

Try each method back to back... I assure you there is a huge difference! The MAJOR difference will be in how loud you can get it without distortion or other degradation.

Then again, it's all down to personal taste... if you're happy with what you currently have, fair play.
 
I just installed a Harmon Kardon DP1 drive and play system hard wired to the fm antenna lead via a supplied "magic box" basically an FM transmitter but the vehicles antenna lead goes through the box and cuts off the signal, still get a very slight interferrance but only notice it when between songs, plus it gives full ipod/iphone control. does require an additional charge adapter for the iphone though (12v down to 5V) all for under £50 on th Bay of E
 
I just installed a Harmon Kardon DP1 drive and play system hard wired to the fm antenna lead via a supplied "magic box" basically an FM transmitter but the vehicles antenna lead goes through the box and cuts off the signal, still get a very slight interferrance but only notice it when between songs, plus it gives full ipod/iphone control. does require an additional charge adapter for the iphone though (12v down to 5V) all for under £50 on th Bay of E

When you say 'through'... does it actually CUT the cable? Or can you still get radio?
 
FM transmittters are the way to go. totally portable, use with any music play with a standard 3.5 mm headphone socket, can keep orginal head unit, no wiring and sounds as good as FM radio

Also cheap as chips!!!:D

Alba Fm Transmiter for ipod / iphone / mp3 play your ipod in car / home | eBay


Utter crap in my experience.

I bit the bullet and followed Clary130's recommendation and replaced the head unit with a modern Alpine using his adaptor harness. Can't believe I didn't do this before. Handsfree Bluetooth, full ipod integration - you name it it's got it - and it sounds fab.
 
As an aside, the steering wheel controls are a simple, single-wire, resistive-ladder type. Pain in the jacksie to try and interface with almost any modern aftermarket HU!
Hi there you seem to be the man that could help me.
I have bought a 2004 Range rover 4.4 vogue and would like to link up my ipod to the radio in some way.
I do not have any aux ports on the radio or on the cd changer in the gove compartment. what is the cheapest and quickest way to get music from my ipod to the radio? even if the quality isnt great?
hope you can help
xx
 
Hi there you seem to be the man that could help me.
I have bought a 2004 Range rover 4.4 vogue and would like to link up my ipod to the radio in some way.
I do not have any aux ports on the radio or on the cd changer in the gove compartment. what is the cheapest and quickest way to get music from my ipod to the radio? even if the quality isnt great?
hope you can help
xx

FM transmitters are a quick n dirty method, but sound quality tends to be crap. If you're not fussed about it sounding no better (and usually worse) than FM radio, it's the easiest method for you. Careful which one you buy though... Alot of the cheap ching-chong-meow-brand eBay crap won't even put out a signal powerful enough to reach your aerial (designed to receive signals from OUTSIDE the car, not inside it!) and you may be plagued by interference from normal radio stations, especially if you live in an area where the FM spectrum is busy - so if you're going to take this route, buy a good branded one.

Unfortunately, I dont have the same intimate knowledge of the L322s audio setup as I do with the P38s, as I've never looked into it in any depth!
 
One word Dension, do a range of kit that hold your eye-pod they do one where the cable plugs directly into the aerial socket. Got mine of flea bay £25 and fitted it in about 30 minutes, looks like it grew there
 
So I gave up doing heavy modification on my car to get an iPod connector and I opted for that Screen Shot 2012-06-01 at 2.02.15 PM.png

Basically this system will is connected to my car antenna Channel 88.4 and even charge my iPhone / iPod. The sound is STUNNING way better than when it comes from the CD player.
 
When you say 'through'... does it actually CUT the cable? Or can you still get radio?

I got mine from Ebay they are far and few between but do come up new unsed and in box, Basically you plug the cars antenna into a little silver box, out of that box comes an antenna cable which the goes to the car radio, the silver box then plugs into a brain which all the other parts of the system attach ie. screen, control wheel lead to phone/ipod, basically the signal is sent to the silver box transmitter which the sends the signal to the head unit as a wired connection rather than a wireless one making it stronger so it will over ride station "bleed over" radio will work as normal when selected. It basically works in the same way as an fm transmitter but more reliable and functional.
 
I know this is a really old thread and an even older quote
Incidentally, I'm making progress with my iPod-to-OEM HU research. I now believe I've identified the pins that carry the audio signal from the CD changer in the C3 connector. I just found something on Landroversonly where somebody identified the wire colours that carried the signals - although this was from a 2003 disco with an Alpine HU, I matched up the quoted colours with pin numbers from a piccy somebody took for me of the plugs in the back of his P38 Alpine HU, and then compared that to my 'suspicions' of where the audio inputs lie, based on where the extra shielding in the loom is, according to RAVE. They match up perfectly - it seems like the L audio is on C3 pin 13 (+, red) and pin 16 (-, grey) and the R on pins 14 (+, white) and 17 (-, black).

The BAD news is, this arrangement can only mean it's a balanced signal... meaning you couldn't just splice an iPod connection into it raw, without causing buzz and interference. I'm currently delving into a way round that, though, using a centre-tapped autotransformer designed for audio applications as a 'balun' - which will take the iPod output (unbalanced) and convert it into a balanced signal. Not sure if that would kill the 'buzz' though, as autotransformers don't provide isolation. It depends on how much isolation the audio source (iPod) has between it's audio and power grounds. We may find that it works just fine, but buzzes like a good'un as soon as you plug a charger into it... the infamous 'ground loop' effect!

Theory all done, and already have a circuit design in my head - just need to protoype and experiment now (difficult without an Alpine setup in front of me to play with) - but if it all works out like I think it will, I should be able to produce an iPod-input adaptor for around the £20 mark.

I may even be able to work a USB charging port into the mix for about an extra tenner... but I'm getting a little ahead of myself there!!

But i was really hoping as I read through the last 8 pages that at the end Clarky130 would successful have produced something that would allow connect via a phono and the blue mini iso to an IPOD/phone/ect.

But the thread just ended unresolved...

So i'm left not knowing what to do I might even have to resort to one of those tape thingys from fleeby... or maybe replace my HU. I've a 1999 with an alpine AMR6284 HU. Any suggestions.
 
I know this is a really old thread and an even older quote

But i was really hoping as I read through the last 8 pages that at the end Clarky130 would successful have produced something that would allow connect via a phono and the blue mini iso to an IPOD/phone/ect.

But the thread just ended unresolved...

So i'm left not knowing what to do I might even have to resort to one of those tape thingys from fleeby... or maybe replace my HU. I've a 1999 with an alpine AMR6284 HU. Any suggestions.
The tape converters work well , apart from being ugly .
But if the heads are wearing in the HU you can get a bit of a hum.
Worth a try tho think they are peanuts nowadays .

Ps if you get a hum stick you'd finger in and wiggle the tape until you get a good position .
 
Plug it into the iPod and then tune your radio into the frequency in the transmitter and you can listen to your tunes ....
 

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