[HELP] Build :Dasaita Max6 digital output with volume control - MTCD Android Head Units Q&A

Hi guys I am owner of a Dasaita Max6 with dsp, I would like to have a digital audio output to connect an external amplifier (helix, audison etc). You can help me (I have basic knowledge of electronics), perhaps from the dsp of my Dasaita max6 with an I2s to spdif interface? any forum user did this? thanks (sorry for my bad english)

hello,
there are quite a few solutions to your problem.
i'm using HELIX dsp; music transmitted via TOSLINK to dsp with UAPP and USB to toslink converter; radio, bt, maps via RCA analog input (no issue though, those are LQ signals).
you won't be able to transmit TOSLINK directly unless you know how to extract I2S data from ADAU1401 DSP (yet audio would be limited to 44.1kHz/16bit /android limitation/... so not the best solution).
to get digital audio OUT:
-use Universal Audio Player PRO; it provides 'bit perfect mode' so you get losless quality. it uses it's own USB driver to bypass android limitations.
-use USB to SPDIF converter. there are many solutions like I2SoverUSBv3 (one of the best quality; i'm using it right now); MCHstreamer (versatile); or devices like Topping D10s; E30 -very good DAC with spdif OUT (check audioscience for review). not sure if UAPP works with Topping though.
one issue that might occur - You'll have no software volume control if you'll be using 'bit perfect mode'.
my dasaita / UAPP has no software volume control at all (with or without 'bp mode'). so i need 'helix director' for volume control.
so in general - it's easy and it simply works

Hi ...........Thanks to TNSMANI for moving my post to a better section ,.
Thanks mahtew for helping me find an alternative solution and for the detailed explanation but I would like to have a real digital output if possible (this to have as few distractions as possible driving the car and not have other electronic devices to manage, such as space, costs etc) but not being an electronic technician but only an amateur (very amateur), I knew that from the dsp chip it is possible to do this, perhaps in this beautiful forum there is a technician who solves this problem ...... thanks
(p.s. excuse me for bad english)

you can belive me or not, but your solution will not benefit with much better sound quality. you will be limited to 16bit/44.1kHz which is limit for android sound driver. it might be good but not the best what you can achive. yet it will be better that RCAout
USB data is asynchronous so quite resistive to noise. USB converters are quite good. so you can get HQ digital source.
if you really need SPDIF out from MCU board, then you should find local workshop specialized in repairing electronic devices. it should be quite easy for him to extract i2s data [input to DSP]. yet keep in mind, that you'll still need RCAout for radio and other non android sounds.

.moved to MTCD..

Hi, let me explain better: I would like to know what are the pins (MASTER CLOCK [MCLKI] ,
BIT CLOCK [BCLK] ,WORD CLOCK [LRCK] ,SERIAL DATA [SD DATA OUT] of the dsp ADAU1401A (Dasaita Max6) to connect an I2S card to spdif
thanks

ginoromano said:
Hi, let me explain better: I would like to know what are the pins (MASTER CLOCK [MCLKI] ,
BIT CLOCK [BCLK] ,WORD CLOCK [LRCK] ,SERIAL DATA [SD DATA OUT] of the dsp ADAU1401A (Dasaita Max6) to connect an I2S card to spdif
thanks
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
What does the Datasheet tell you? Were you looking for someone else to do the work and explain to you how to do it?
Here's the datasheet, all the info concerning interfacing to the ADA: https://www.analog.com/media/en/technical-documentation/data-sheets/ADAU1401A.pdf

hello, thanks for replying, I only have basic electronics information, I do not have the datashet of the dasaita max6 but I think that the ADAU1401A has activated an analog connection of the front of the rear and of the sub, but is programmed to activate the I2s digital outputs ? if the answer is yes, what are the pins of the digital front? thanks

Related

Bluetooth music headphones

Hi Guys,
I have been on the search to find a bluetooth headphone that will allow you to listen to music through bluetooth on your I-mate/XDA 2 etc.
I came accross the Sonorix OBH-0100.
Site:http://www.sonorix.com/eng/sono_product_obh0100.html
Review:http://www.worldofppc.com/HWTests/openbt2.htm
I sent an e-mail to the company asking whether this set would work with Pocket PC (XDA 2). They replied back saying that current pocket pc's would need a A2DP (advanced audio distribution profile) to be able to use your bluetooth headphones to listen to music from your device.
Does anyone know how we could go about adding this extra bluetooth feature.
Im sure that alot of you would like this option / accessory. So if anyone could help that would be appreciated.
Thanks
Hi, well done on finding the BT headphones, I've been trying to find something like this for a while...
first, on other parts of this site there are links to the following place:
http://bluetooth.i-networx.de/index_e.html
This guy is busy writing BT software for the XDA to fill in the shortfalls, and slowly including more profiles into his BT tools, He may be able to help with the profile problem for the XDA...
Also, are they actually selling these units yet? The URL you supplied only seems to supply 'sample' sets for traders, I would like to know where it is being sold, and if not when it is being released if the info is available..
http://forum.xda-developers.com/viewtopic.php?t=6816&highlight=bluetooth+stereo
people say that the quality is horrible if it worked
Hmm I dunno, maybe it is possible to send the audio across the BT link compressed (maybe MP3 like) and do the decompression back into audio locally, this would possibly make it possible to send resonable quality over the BT link bitrate (I think it's about 700k).
Their website claims to have reached CD quality audio.
yeah suppose you could do that but it would require
a uncompression in the head set
it would be possible of cause but from that guy who tried it
it may require more then just a std profile
Yes, a special profile is required as mentioned in the first post, apparently it is an advanced audio digital profile (a2dp), but no hand held units have it yet, we were hoping someone may be able to write profile support for the XDA...
I sent an e-mail to Tobias at Pocket Bluetooth tools about these particular headphones and he replied that he has no ordered the headphones and will work on the A2DP profile as soon as he recieves the headphones.
Hope something good comes out of this.
Will keep you updated 8)
Great news, now we only need to sit back and wait.
I had a look at the site but they only seem to be selling trader samples? Do we know where these items can be bought yet and how much? if not do we know a release date?
No, they havent mentioned anything about a release date but I have heard that many people have ordered the trade samples to test them out.
I think trade samples is the ony way you can buy for the time being ...$220 is the price as I remember and this excludes delivery and tax that you might have to pay.
But I have to admit they look very cool and if Tobias can solve this problem soon, I would certainly order one for myself.
BT audio transport
Hi folks,
I'm on the search for BT headset that also plays back the audio output of my MDA II (e.g. direction info of tomtom nav 3 ...)´. When I found this thread I thought that's it, but there is now follow up after Apr. 24th.
Any news yet?
Still no news!?!?!?!
:x
what you need is a bluetooth profile which have support for
Advanced Audio Distribution Profile
ms really dont like bluetooth all that much and their stack lack most bluetooth profiles
maybe the latest vidcomm stack support it
more about bluetooth profiles
http://www.palowireless.com/infotooth/tutorial/profiles.asp
maybe you should look into this product
http://www.bluetake.com/products/BT420EX.htm
but some guy in the forum had one for test and said the phone quality was pretty poor
RE
OK guys!
A short review has been posted here:-
http://www.ppcsg.com/forums/viewtop...t=iphono&sid=6d3d546329a09353b6817f1c28cdca86
From another thread Pocket Bluetooth Tools doesn't work very well with iPHONO bluetooth headphone and the digital Bluespoon bluetooth headset. However, it creates a non-dynamic serial port and enables printing from the O2 XDA II to HP 450CBi bluetooth portable printer.
http://www.ppcsg.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=38299&sid=6d3d546329a09353b6817f1c28cdca86
:roll:

We need help please to activate FM transmitter in hd2/nexus join us

we have started a thread in hd2 forum about depeloping driver for fm transimitter BUILT IN IN THE HD2 AND OTHER devices which has the bradcom chip bmc 4329 like (nexus one ) but we need experts to help us if you are expert at programming or any thing related to the following thread or just you have a good idea please join us at
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=622377
We need help please to activate FM transmitter in hd2/nexus join us
we have started a thread in hd2 forum about depeloping driver for fm transimitter BUILT IN IN THE HD2 AND OTHER devices which has the bradcom chip bmc 4329 like (nexus one ) but we need experts to help us if you are expert at programming or any thing related to the following thread or just you have a good idea please join us at
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=622377
Maybe put FM TRANSMITTER FOR HD2/NEXUS ONE in the title
I vote for a better title also...
Make it clear, because this title sounds like a noob that do not search creating a thread that will be shut down in a matter of minutes.
Maybe something like: "We need help to activate FM transmitter in HD2"
Hey hoss, congrats on Egypt's great win yesterday.
Can you please use proper capitalization in the title? Like what zefiltrin posted: "We need help to activate FM transmitter in HD2".
I have an HD2 and it would be immensely useful to have an FM transmitter!
As I wrote before, FmRadioSDK.dll and HTCFM.dll are wrappers, not drivers.
HTCFM.DLL is wrapper of FmRadioSDK.dll. FMRadioSDK is wrapper of Bluetooth Stack.
Bluetooth stack decode data and forward request and hide all implementation details inside.
I bet HTC doesn't know those implementation details and broadcomm won't tell anybody (unless pay for it?).
we need to work on BT related files.
I posted key functions within FMRadioSDK in FM RDS thread before.
I think we have to write a tool to inject bluetooth stack/driver to see how things work.
The worst thing could be bluetooth stop working while our program control FM Transmitter etc.
NSider said:
Hey hoss, congrats on Egypt's great win yesterday.
Can you please use proper capitalization in the title? Like what zefiltrin posted: "We need help to activate FM transmitter in HD2".
I have an HD2 and it would be immensely useful to have an FM transmitter!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
tanks allot ...................
we still need help so comon guys
Hello my friends,
Can you explain me why you want to make an FM transmitter with HD2 / Nexus ?
And what is the Mhz ?
22MHZ to 200 MHZ ?
Thanks a lot,
regards,
Nixeus
I can answer question #1 - simply because its,
cool, fun, and useful (in the car/hookup to stream your music to a sound system and you forgot the cable and maybe just got the headset)
regards
Nixeus said:
Hello my friends,
Can you explain me why you want to make an FM transmitter with HD2 / Nexus ?
And what is the Mhz ?
22MHZ to 200 MHZ ?
Thanks a lot,
regards,
Nixeus
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
why are you askong about mhz it is the frequency of a wave but what kind of wave are you asking about wifi or radio or what
In order to transmit on the polices frequences or military frequence, or C.B frequence
Nixeus said:
Hello my friends,
Can you explain me why you want to make an FM transmitter with HD2 / Nexus ?
And what is the Mhz ?
22MHZ to 200 MHZ ?
Thanks a lot,
regards,
Nixeus
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
An FM transmitter, as mentioned above, is useful for sending music to your car's radio in case it doesn't have an audio in jack or you don't want additional wiring.
As for the frequency, that would the regular FM channels' frequencies which fall in the range of 87.5-108.0 MHz. Ideally, if FM transmission was achieved on HD2/N1, it should be able to transmit at low power at any frequency falling within that range. The user would choose the frequency at which there is least interference in his location and use it to transmit low-power FM signals that his car can pick up.
I just played with FM transmitter feature of a prototype nokia phone.
Interestingly it prompts me to unplug accessories (headset) in order to enable FM Transmitter.
That means FM Transmitter is not using headset as antenna.
Looking at size of this device I don't think it use large/long internal antenna either.
Also read some internal documents related to broadcomm BCM chipset. Broadcomm provided SDK to manufactures rather than giving them hardware interface documents. The phone must sends a set of RAM initialization data to the BCM chipset after reset otherwise the chipset won't response to any commands.
In other word, we will need two things:
1. Find a device that using same chipset to provide FM transmitter. So we will know initialization data and control commands.
2. reverse engineer Broadcomm SDK/FM Radio on HD2 to understand the hardware ports.
After that it is possible to write a hardware driver for HD2.
ps. I think FM transmitter is useless. I have one at home. sound quality is too poor, even worse than WM radio. feels like a low pass filter.
And have to keep changing frequency when traveling between cities.
I spent £ 15 bought a cheapest mp3 in car stereo that supports SD card, USB drive and AUX input with many useful features, with expected sound quality.
If I spent a little more on that car stereo could come with A2DP so that I can use phone bluetooth as "FM Transmitter"
I only need it plays music from my key ring USB drive. threw my old Alpine stereo with that FM transmitter away.
This would be great! I could finally kick the ipod to the curb!
really will be useful
goooo....
funny i was just wondering yesterday about getting one of those fm transmitters commonly used for ipods, thinking it might work better than the poor sound i'm currently getting from the head phones i'm using with my leo.
would this be compatible with my TP2?
No you tp2 don't have a (BCM4329)chip so no go
jan-willem3 said:
No you tp2 don't have a (BCM4329)chip so no go
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Oh well, i have a 3.5mm to fm adaptor from my ipod, and my cay has bt streaming (Thanks ford!)

Android and USB audio

In have a question about Android and how it handles USB audio. I know that USB has a unified audio layer that is standardized and requires little in order to be seen and operated by the os. Its that reason why most usb audio class devices are simply plug and play, however some devices require add'l drivers for extra fucntions, i.e. dsp functions. What I'm trying to understand is how Android handles usb audio, does it conform to usb audio class stipulations as well, so audio devices are generally plug and play, or is there something extra that would be required?
I'm asking because I hope to get a G-Tablet this Xmas and use it in my car. I could just use the analogue outs but I want something a bit more robust, and was hoping to get an external usb audio device with multiple outputs. Maybe write a driver if needed depending on the complexity, of course. any help would be appreciated.
USB audio works on my Allwinner A10 tablet witn "Unofficial CyanogenMod 9 for many AllWinner A10 tablets" firmware from Christian Troy

[Q] USB sound card on Android?

I have a Android pad running 2.1 and it has 2 x USB ports and a lousy audio out (3.5 Jack).
I was wondering if USB soundcards work on Android? I am under the impression it is plug&play in linux, and that android uses the same audio driver? (just not via USB).
Beeing able to use a USB soundcard with propper sound would greatly improve sound quality (I want to use my pad in my car) :/
+1
I also want to know about USB sound cards support under Android. I have SB Live 24 (USB) and it works with my ARM-based Asus Wi-Fi router, but what about Android 2.2 and MIDs with USB-host port? ;-)
Anyone tried it?
It could be possible
Any update on this thread, would like to get this for my asus transformer if anyone can confirm it works. http://www.asus.com/Multimedia/Audio_Cards/Xonar_U3/#overview
It could be possible!
I tray it on acer iconia tab a500 and noting happend.
It not working.
It maybe need a driver but i don't see any driver anywere
:-(
USB audio in Android progress
Just for note, it works! I recently added self-compiled snd-usb-audio modules to allwinner based tablet. Found corresponding /dev/snd/* devices. Hard part is to add switch to USB audio to java, if there are no full alsa support in ROM. If alsa used, I need only edit /etc/asound.conf ;-)
tsynik said:
Just for note, it works! I recently added self-compiled snd-usb-audio modules to allwinner based tablet. Found corresponding /dev/snd/* devices. Hard part is to add switch to USB audio to java, if there are no full alsa support in ROM. If alsa used, I need only edit /etc/asound.conf ;-)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
could you give some more details on how this was done?
USB OTG gets mouse/keyboard/mass storage working, but USB soundcard doesn't get sound through it (though the card is receiving power) and I cant see a way to check if it can see the device.
the USB soundcard I'm using was seen by my linux pc (kernel 3.0.0-15) straight away no drivers or config needed.
Here is a what I found on USB AUDIO output with Android (maybe it makes sense to put and update this table to the first topic)
NOTE: as of now SOME (not all!) USB AUDIO Android support implementations stream data through Android MUX that disturbs the original PCM stream for changing volume which means re-sampling original media, but also limited to 44.1kHz(some 48) 16 bit, so for SOME Android:
1) max all your volume controls while using external DAC
2) there is no reason to have / use DAC with higher rates then 44.1/16
3) there is no reason to have / use files of more then 44.1/16 quality. Trying to play 96kHz 24bit file will result in forcing Android to re-sample it on the fly with limited resources and not perfect algorithms leading to degrading output quality lower then proper done in studio or desktop 44.1/16!
There might be a way bypassing the Android layer and going right to ALSA you can do 24 bit.
If you specify a hardware device ("hw:0") in ALSA you can bypass any potential sample conversions.
*there is way around it in linux ALSA http://blog.agdunn.net/?p=434 but i have not seen such for Android
Supporting Devices
---------
Galaxy S III $700 Android phone
ARCHOS G9 $250+ Android tablet (looks like the key is OMAP chipset kernel drivers)
Squeezebox Touch $250 - propriatary logitech linux box
Ainol Novo 7/8 Advance 8gb 100$ Android tablet or Allwinner with a modded Android kernel
Nook Touch with custom rom
any A10 Android tablet http://www.slatedroid.com/topic/33373-rom-cm9-nightlies/
* Hyundai A7HD tablet with Cm9
* Mediacom 907c, Momo11 Bird, JXD S9000, Eken A90
* Visture V3
* Mediacom 910i, Teclast A10t
* ICOO D90W
* CEMA10N7 "unknown" device
* Bmorn V99
* Mediacom 711i, Momo9
* Protab2XXL
* Sanei N83
* Hyundai A7HD
* MOMO9 needs
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?p=22280857#post22280857
http://www.slatedroid.com/topic/29289-usb-audio-cards-support-drivers-and-libs/
. B&N Nook Colour with a modded Android kernel
http://forum.xda-developers.com/showthread.php?t=1459892
. WitsTech A81G with a slightly modded Android kernel
http://android.modaco.com/topic/343858-external-usb-devices/page__st__20
Suported DACs:
for Galaxy S III
List of USB DACs with known USB controller that interwork with Samsung Galaxy S III for the time being:
+ AMB Labs Gamma2 with USB controller TI Burr-Brown PCM2707
+ FiiO E7 with USB controller TI Burr-Brown PCM2706
+ HifiMan Express with USB controller TI Burr-Brown PCM2702
+ Topping TP30 with USB controller TI Burr-Brown PCM2704
+ ODAC Tenor TE7022
List of USB DACs with known USB controller that don't interworking with Samsung Galaxy S III for the time being:
. FiiO E17 with USB controller Tenor TE7022
. iBasso D6 with USB controller TI TAS1020B
. Grant Fidelity TubeDAC-11 with USB controller Tenor TE7022
Hegel HD20 with USB controller Tenor TE7022 has also some issue
Audiotrak Prodigy Cube with USB controller Tenor TE7022
for Archos G9
+FiiO E17
+BEHRINGER UCA222
- E10 not supported
for Ainol Novo 7/8 Advance
+FiiO E7
+Burr-Brown PCM2704 USB DAC
+Creative
for Squeezebox Touch
+ Red Wine Audio Isabellina and an
+ HRT Music Streamer II+.
B&N Nook Colour
+Logitech DAC A-5572A |
+Beresford TC-7520SE Caiman |
+FiiO E7
B&N Nook Touch
+C-Media $5 USB adaptor
+Lexicon Alpha 24 bit adaptor
please reply here if you find more info on DAC/devices suppot so i'll keep this post up to date.
I use either a C-Media $5 USB adaptor or a Lexicon Alpha 24 bit adaptor on my Nook Touch.
By bypassing the Android layer and going right to ALSA I can do 24 bit field recording.
If you specify a hardware device ("hw:0") in ALSA you can bypass any potential sample conversions.
Renate NST said:
I use either a C-Media $5 USB adaptor or a Lexicon Alpha 24 bit adaptor on my Nook Touch.
By bypassing the Android layer and going right to ALSA I can do 24 bit field recording.
If you specify a hardware device ("hw:0") in ALSA you can bypass any potential sample conversions.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
why you are sure that it is 24 bit coming out of Nook Touch tablet?
what ROM / kernel you are using?
where you specify a hardware device? this should be done editing config file or there is a menu items in settings interface?
I'm sure that it's 24 bit because I can look at the file and see that all the bits are exercised.
Moreover, since the microphone only hits about -30dBFS, I have to crank the gain.
Compared to a 16 bit recording (which is effectively 11 bits when using 30 dB gain), the 24 bits (effectively 19 bits) sounds much better.
The Nook doesn't have any builtin audio, except for Dummy which is hw:0
My application uses hw:1
There's really no need to select the audio adapter because there is usually just the one.
Renate NST said:
The Nook doesn't have any builtin audio, except for Dummy which is hw:0
My application uses hw:1
There's really no need to select the audio adapter because there is usually just the one.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I am a bit confused.
can you explain step by step how to archive it on stock NOOK touch?
1)install custom ROM with kernel and USB host support?
2)install specific media player? which one do you use?
3)plug in USB DAC, player will use it as output by default so no hw:0 tweaking needed?
The whole USB host mode on Nook Touch is covered here.
You will need a modified kernel.
The stock mediaplayer works but there is an unresolved bug that you need a little utility app to get over.
You need to put in an asound.conf
Renate NST said:
The stock mediaplayer works but there is an unresolved bug that you need a little utility app to get over.
You need to put in an asound.conf
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
So putting asound.conf from the thread you'd mention will solve it and it will be transparent output 24bit 96khz?
can I use other media player such as Astro or PoweAMP?
The Android layer only supports 16 bits.
The MediaPlayer can not play 24 bit files.
To do anything 24 bit you need an external USB adaptor that supports it and an application that directly uses ALSA.
I believe that there are other 24 bit apps on the market.
24 bit is really only useful for recording when there is a large dynamic range.
Renate NST said:
The Android layer only supports 16 bits.
The MediaPlayer can not play 24 bit files.
To do anything 24 bit you need an external USB adaptor that supports it and an application that directly uses ALSA.
I believe that there are other 24 bit apps on the market.
24 bit is really only useful for recording when there is a large dynamic range.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think we are talking about different use-cases.
My question was on plugging external 24bit/96kHz capable DAC (not ADC) to Android device and playing high quality 16bit/44.1 and higher .flac files using one of android players through that external DAC.
As i understand you've done it at least for 16bit DAC? and even mentioned that there is a way to bypass Android layer to get up to24 bit transparently out to the DAC and can highlight the steps for Nook Thouch to archive it.
Can you share your experience, settings and apps you've used?
Most USB adapters you will find are 16 bit.
To get 24 bit, you have to go to a "pro" interface, M-Audio, Lexicon, whatever.
ALSA supports 24 & 32 bits, but does not directly support MP3 or FLAC.
The Android layer supports MP3 (maybe FLAC?) playback, but not record.
You can get 24 bit playback just by using the ALSA utility aplay on PCM files only.
I do not know what there is on the market for 24 bit record/play.
You'd need an app with a JNI interface to the ALSA library.
I wrote a recording application for the Nook Touch that does that.
I cited it in the thread mentioned.
Renate NST said:
Most USB adapters you will find are 16 bit.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just got stock Nook Simple Touch. Can you guide what steps to do to let it play music to external DAC?

Question What should I buy?

Which HU do you recommend to buy?
Now I have Wondefoo MTCE PX5 4/32 (Hal9k mod v 5.1.0) and I wanted to change for something with UIS7862.
I am wondering about the following:
- Teyes CC3
- MEKEDE M700s
- Isudar T72
Is Teyes worth the money? I like this UI a lot, but I've read about these system locking issues against mods, apps and third-party accessories.
As far as I can see, the Isudar T72 doesn't have a cool UI and it's just plain Android without a cool launcher.
MEKEDE seems cool, lower price than Teyes. The UI also looks nice and you can also upgrade the screen to QLED or even 2K QLED.
What do i expect?
- Google Maps + Yanosik (app with navigation and warnings [speedcamera, road blocks, etc.]) + Spotify/FM radio working together
- it's nice if the factory radio app has support for the logo of the selected station
- Google assistant
- volume change in relation to speed
- nokill for the application (e.g. Spotify auto play when it was before the radio was put to sleep)
- rear and front camera in the bumper
- TPMS support (I currently have Deelife TPMS)
- CANBUS for Fiat Bravo II
Does anyone have a 360 camera set for this type of radio? How does it work and is it worth it?
The only question is, which HU will be the most worthwhile in terms of value for money? Which has the least problems?
I've got the Mekede M300S for my Peugeot 308.
Google Maps is working brilliantly with Android Auto. There is a standalone Google Maps app as well, which works just like on your phone
Spotify works (even with xManager), standalone or through Android Auto
I don't listen to radio at all, but I know there's an app which supports stations with logos, easily downloadable
Google Assistant works by clicking on the Voice Search app on the headunit, works natively with the Assistant button on your car or by saying "Hey Google" if you're using Android Auto
Supports adaptive volume
Not sure about autoplay on Spotify as standalone, but Android Auto does support this feature. It'll resume the music when you connect to your car if it was playing before
Supports rear view camera through analog input, front camera through USB. Alternatively, you have the option to purchase an optional 360 camera option, but you need to buy the unit with this as they need to do some modifications to the unit at the factory to solder the extra chip needed. LINK
Does support TPMS. Not sure if it support Deelife TPMS, but they have their own option.
It does come with a canbus decoder I believe, but you need to ask the seller to be sure. It came with one for my Peugeot.
Avoid teyes unless you reside in eastern Europe.
I have mekede store (whoever that is that claim to be mekede) FYT 53 and 116. Model numbers are made up and can vary FYI factory of origin. These are supposted m500 and m700.
Both are good reliable units that have proven superior to MTCx platform.
Whatever you decide, get screenshots of system info and their promise of screen type before handing over cash.
@marchnz nope, fortunagely I am from western Europe The more I read it looks like Teyes is sh.i.t in a nice piece of paper (like candy). Pity, I like theirs design
I think that I am most willing to buying Mekede. It will probably be the most powerful configuration.
But are these QLED screens worth anything? There is a small surcharge for regular QLED, a little higher for QLED 2K, but on the other hand I can see that the buttons on the left are missing on the 2K screen. And there will be good to have buttons for on and off or changing volume, I think ...
@daviddosa As for the front camera, I do not want a dvr (I have a decent Viofo dvr camera), but I want one for parking, like the rear one, but in the front.
All from my list are dedicated for my car, so that they have canbus.
Why doesn't Joying appear in your list?
Solvin said:
Why doesn't Joying appear in your list?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
There is no Joying for my car.
pablosso said:
Which HU do you recommend to buy?
Now I have Wondefoo MTCE PX5 4/32 (Hal9k mod v 5.1.0) and I wanted to change for something with UIS7862.
I am wondering about the following:
- Teyes CC3
- MEKEDE M700s
- Isudar T72
Is Teyes worth the money? I like this UI a lot, but I've read about these system locking issues against mods, apps and third-party accessories.
As far as I can see, the Isudar T72 doesn't have a cool UI and it's just plain Android without a cool launcher.
MEKEDE seems cool, lower price than Teyes. The UI also looks nice and you can also upgrade the screen to QLED or even 2K QLED.
What do i expect?
- Google Maps + Yanosik (app with navigation and warnings [speedcamera, road blocks, etc.]) + Spotify/FM radio working together
- it's nice if the factory radio app has support for the logo of the selected station
- Google assistant
- volume change in relation to speed
- nokill for the application (e.g. Spotify auto play when it was before the radio was put to sleep)
- rear and front camera in the bumper
- TPMS support (I currently have Deelife TPMS)
- CANBUS for Fiat Bravo II
Does anyone have a 360 camera set for this type of radio? How does it work and is it worth it?
The only question is, which HU will be the most worthwhile in terms of value for money? Which has the least problems?
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I just got an AOTO S8 Ultra G2 that I'm bench testing while my car is in the shop and I'm loving it. Like it so good i ordered the dash trim and harness to (temporarily) put it in my truck.
pablosso said:
There is no Joying for my car.
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You say that like it matters
marchnz said:
You say that like it matters
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A bit yes.
I want that HU comes with a canbus for my car because I have a Fiat system called Blue&Me. It's pain in the ass...
Without the canbus, steering wheel controls and a few other things won't work. That's why I don't want anything universal, but something that is tested (or should be) for my car.
Just simple Plug & Play.
Hmm, I had the same dilema, thanks to you, this Mekeda M700S look quite interesting.
pablosso said:
A bit yes.
I want that HU comes with a canbus for my car because I have a Fiat system called Blue&Me. It's pain in the ass...
Without the canbus, steering wheel controls and a few other things won't work. That's why I don't want anything universal, but something that is tested (or should be) for my car.
Just simple Plug & Play.
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Click to collapse
I had to get a PAC RP5-GM11 Wiring Interface to make my SWC work and OnStar

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