AVForums

Our philosophy in our forums, reviews, podcasts and feature videos is to promote audio and visual excellence by gathering and sharing the best information and resources available.

Help

To begin please visit our help section »

Not a Member Yet?

It only takes a minute to start enjoying the benefits of AVForums membership, and it's free!

Member Log in

Portable DVD - Headphone X 2 - Boost Please

Post Reply
Old 28-09-2003, 6:53 PM   #1
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Portsmouth UK
Experience Points:
3,071, Level: 13
Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 0
Posts: 15
Portable DVD - Headphone X 2 - Boost Please

Hi

Newbie here so please go gentle.

I have used the search and while I have found some adjacent topics (and learned something too!) nothing directly to my quest.

I have a portable DVD for use in the car, which has a single screen with integral speaker (weeny) and a headphone socket.

I am more than content with the single screen but the audio performance is pretty dire once the car is on the move, largely due to the road noise.

I bought an adaptor so I could give a set of headphones to each child but of course that is asking too much of the output from the player (or is it?)

My question is: How can I best improve the audio performance via headphones is there a gizzmo on the market that will do the bizz for not much money?

Thank you for your patience.

NormanB
  Quote
Old 03-10-2003, 12:43 PM   #2
Member
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Scotland
Experience Points:
3,855, Level: 14
Points: 3,855, Level: 14 Points: 3,855, Level: 14 Points: 3,855, Level: 14
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 1
Posts: 151
NormandB,
if you have a cassette player in the car (yes, they are still around)
how about a cheap dummy cassete transducer, to pipe your sound trough the car speakers?
Or a radio-transmitter to you radio (they are used with MP3 players as well)

...of course the entire family will have to listen to the movie...
  Quote
Old 03-10-2003, 1:08 PM   #3
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Portsmouth UK
Experience Points:
3,071, Level: 13
Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 0
Posts: 15
Saggio

Thank you for replying.

The radio transmitter option sounds the best option for me ( I can always fade out the front speakers!) - I will research that.

Any clues or advice on radio transmitters for this purpose gratefully received.

VMT
NormanB
  Quote
Old 07-10-2003, 9:26 AM   #4
AOD AOD is offline
Member
 
AOD's Avatar
Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: London
Experience Points:
6,237, Level: 18
Points: 6,237, Level: 18 Points: 6,237, Level: 18 Points: 6,237, Level: 18
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 14, Got 5
Posts: 689
Yep, try this one.

Arkon Wireless Audio adaptor
  Quote
Old 11-10-2003, 6:06 AM   #5
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Portsmouth UK
Experience Points:
3,071, Level: 13
Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 0
Posts: 15
Thank You

Anthony

That was just the clue I needed.

I missed that particular one but ended up getting this model for £17!

It is a good solution for the price and provides quite excellent sound. I do not mind sacrificing the ability to listen to my music if it keeps the kids quiet with a movie!

Thanks again for the help.

NormanB
  Quote
Old 13-10-2003, 9:09 AM   #6
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Portsmouth UK
Experience Points:
3,071, Level: 13
Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 0
Posts: 15
Just to close the loop - finally.

These are great bits of kit to solve the problem, relatively cheaply.

However, there are practical drawbacks:

1. As you travel and move into different reception areas - interference may come into play. (you need to teach the kids how to select the dip switches for a clear frequency).

2. As driver you have to listen so best if you have rear speakers and fade out the front ones!
  Quote
Old 15-09-2004, 4:44 PM   #7
Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Experience Points:
3,582, Level: 14
Points: 3,582, Level: 14 Points: 3,582, Level: 14 Points: 3,582, Level: 14
Activity: 1.4%
Activity: 1.4% Activity: 1.4% Activity: 1.4%
Thanks: Gave 70, Got 5
Posts: 279
Question Wireless or IR alternatives?

Old thread, but same query really. Getting sound to 3 kids in the back...

Has anybody any advice on linking more than one headset to an IR or RF headset?

Are there any good cheap ones with decent battery life for a long trip and a few movies (Cornwall to Scotland is on the cards!!)?
  Quote
Old 15-09-2004, 5:08 PM   #8
New Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: Portsmouth UK
Experience Points:
3,071, Level: 13
Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13 Points: 3,071, Level: 13
Activity: 0%
Activity: 0% Activity: 0% Activity: 0%
Thanks: Gave 0, Got 0
Posts: 15
Yeah

I soon got fed up listening to movies.

So my kids use the walkman/fm radio/wired headset each and it works absolutely fine. The eldest changes the dips as required on the transmitter when transisting an area where a radio station blasts through.

I am a cheapskate so never bothered investigating with the wireless option as they already had the portables (walkman size) but I suspect even buying new is cheaper than going the fully wireless route.

I see my linky above has died - this is the transmitter I bought and use the batteries last absolutely ages.

NormanB

Last edited by NormanB; 15-09-2004 at 5:11 PM.
  Quote
Old 15-09-2004, 8:00 PM   #9
Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Experience Points:
3,582, Level: 14
Points: 3,582, Level: 14 Points: 3,582, Level: 14 Points: 3,582, Level: 14
Activity: 1.4%
Activity: 1.4% Activity: 1.4% Activity: 1.4%
Thanks: Gave 70, Got 5
Posts: 279
Great idea! I have a little radio that I use on my motorbike that would work with the sender. However even my most technically literate child is only 8 and I can see myself stopping every 10 miles because she's pressed the wrong button.

I just went on beststuff.co.uk and ordered an extra two way splitter and 3 cheap Koss headphones, total £30.96. I'll see if the machine can actually power three headsets (it did fine with two of the little in-ear jobs, but the kids hated them).

Cheers
  Quote
Old 30-09-2004, 9:33 AM   #10
Member
Join Date: Jul 2004
Experience Points:
3,582, Level: 14
Points: 3,582, Level: 14 Points: 3,582, Level: 14 Points: 3,582, Level: 14
Activity: 1.4%
Activity: 1.4% Activity: 1.4% Activity: 1.4%
Thanks: Gave 70, Got 5
Posts: 279
The cheap and cheerful solution worked a treat on a recent 8 hour trip. No problem with the machine being able to power three headphones, they had volume to spare.

So quiet we had to keep checking we hadn't left them behind
  Quote
Post Reply

Powered by  
 Latest popular product prices
Sony MDR-NC7 
6 prices from
 £14.97 Click to show/hide the offers

Sony MDR-ZX300 
6 prices from
 £17.63 Click to show/hide the offers

Sennheiser CX 300-II 
8 prices from
 £32.99 Click to show/hide the offers

Panasonic RP-HTX7 
3 prices from
 £28.89 Click to show/hide the offers

SoundMAGIC E10 
2 prices from
 £34.99 Click to show/hide the offers

Sony MDR-XB500 
2 prices from
 £39.99 Click to show/hide the offers

Beyerdynamic DTX 101 iE 
1 price
 £52.24 Click to show/hide the offers

Klipsch Image S4i 
6 prices from
 £59.94 Click to show/hide the offers

 Updated February 13th at 9:30pm. Prices include delivery.


Thread information and display options
Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off