Well, nowadays there are better audio codes with Bluetooth audio. However I think the issue you had at the time was using an audio connection. Bluetooth has two different connections for transferring audio. One is used for phones (heatset) the other is used for multimedia purposes. The main difference being audio quality. You can have a virtually no delay connection for headset mode at the cost of audio bandwidth. As for the Multimedia mode, nowadays we have codecs like APTX+ so you can have very very short delays. It will not hinder your ability to converse and will hardly ever be noticable, but it will be there. I'd suggest using a good but cheap headset to transfer the audio, rather than trying to find a good audio transfer dongle. Thatvway you can go to a store, test some headsets with your phone, when you find something you like you can buy it and then Crack it open, solder some wires and et voila! You have nice audio!
On Sun, Nov 20, 2022, 20:39 Mark Brantana via BVARC <[email protected]> wrote: > In the very distant past, about 15 years ago, I purchased a Sony bluetooth > adapter, hoping to avoid having to run a wire from the radio receiver in > the trunk and avoid having to install a another speaker. It did not work > because the old bluetooth had a very noticible time delay. This meant that > if I was trying to get into a conversation I was always about a second > behind the game. This was weird. So, it did not work. Now I am hoping to > try that again with the newer Bluetooth and wonder if anyone has tried it > and what sort of experience anyone has had. Is there still a time delay? > What adapter did you use? Does it make sense to go to the aux system of > your car? > > Mark > N5PRD > ________________________________________________ > Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club > > BVARC mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org > Publicly available archives are available here: > https://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ >
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