I had connected earphones and speaker to xperia m2 (D2305) the sound is normal with earphone, but when I connect it to a speaker (not for desktop or phone, but speaker with 3.5mm plug, usb port, and card reader) the sound output volume is really low at max. But my friend phone's (samsung,lg,iphone,etc) volume is normal.
Is there any spec that I need to look before I connect it to my phone (or what is the spec of a phone's headphone). Because I'm afraid that the volume output will be low when I bought it.
I would like to buy Sony MDR XB450AP. Is it compatible for phone?
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Complete newb question. Just got an audio converter cable (goes from the charger point so a normal headphone can plug in). I put in headphones and I don't get stereo sound (sound only one side, the right side). How do I get sound to change from mono to stereo?
The headphone jack on the G Tablet works with a typical headphone or speakers, as long as you connect it with the right plug.
If you connect a headset with a microphone, to this jack - will that work too?
Will the audio out come into the headset?
Will the audio in go in via the headset microphone?
employee said:
If you connect a headset with a microphone, to this jack - will that work too?
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Wondering the same thing myself but have nothing to test it with.
Nope. I tested with my hands free set in my car and no go. I put my hand over the mic (which is way sensitive BTW) and could only record from internal mic.
Headset/mic combos with one plug are meant for phones. Their input jacks are wired to spk and mic channels.
Headset/mic combos with two plugs are for computers and each plug must go in the right input on the PC.
The GTablet is much more computer than phone, although many of us are using sip apps to MAKE it a phone too.
Our headphone jack is just that, a headphone jack.
Does anyone know, what the maximum load on the Headphones Jack is? Without blowing the AMP.
Thanks in Advance,
iD
/bump
Anyone know what the speaker should be? 4ohm? 8ohm? watt? anything?
Regards,
o/
6mW According to the all in one chip specs, I'm not sure if there's an interposing amplifier. The chip has a separate speaker driver that is 2W for the rear unit.
In short, speakers are not recommended. I tried attaching a set of small laptop speakers to the headphone socket and at full volume it was distorted and very quiet.
I would expect that the only way to provide speaker level output would be to hook the jack to an external amplifier. This clearly works fine, as you can run an audio/video output from this jack to an external TV. Amplified laptop speakers, or one of the mp3 dock type things would be fine.
You are unlikely to damage anything internally by just connecting speakers, as despite the very much lower impedance than headphones, there is so little power being dissipated, I would expect the internal amplifier to not have any problems.
It matters not what the 'wattage' rating of the speakers you chose to connect is, as this is just a measure of the level of output the speaker can handle from an amplifier Despite the common misconception that more 'watts' marked on your speakers means more volume, this is NOT the case.
Hiya,
I got hold of a pair of logitech Z305 USB speakers to try on my Transformer. When I plug them in, the light on them turns green, and the volume buttons on them work to increase and decrease my volume. However, I don't get any sound out of them; sound still comes through the tinny asus speakers!
So, is there any way to change where sound is output too on the tablet? I am aware that I could get a 3.5mm cable and plug that in to the speakers/netbook as well, which should work, but I was wondering if there was a more elegant/less cable-intense solution?
Thanks,
James
It's important to understand that USB speakers (and usb headphones/microphones) are not simply speakers/headphones/mics. They are really little USB sound cards that happen to have a pair of speakers or mic hoooked up to a small power amp built in to them. They do not magically transfer the output of your built-in sound card to the speakers over USB. (like plugging in an 1/8" stereo plug would). So, unless the transformer has support for the standard USB audio protocols used by your USB speakers (and I doubt it does) you won't hear anything out of those speakers. Additionally, since the transformer doesn't know what to do with the USB sound card you have plugged it it doesn't recognize it as an alternative sound output (like A2DP bluetooth audio) and will continue to pump sound out of the built in speakers.
Your best bet is going to be to use standard speakers with an 1/8" jack or a set of expensive bluetooth speakers. Now, will the 3.1 upgrade bring support for usb speakers and headphones? Maybe... I haven't seen anything to indicate one way or the other aside from the very nebulous statement that 3.1 will provide USB host "support".
-Matt
I listen to a lot of music and have been disappointed with some of my Samsung phones headphone output volume, clarity seems ok.
What would you say the headphone output volume was like and quality was with your devices?
not interested in phone speaker volumes, just from headphone socket, I know it depends on headphones or speakers you have plugged into, but some phones have a very low output and some have pretty bad background hiss.