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![]() I tried one of the cassette audio couplers and now it will not exit! Looks like I will have to remove the Philips car radio and take it apart. The head had a small head-only plastic cover and this may have had to be removed :-( "Ken Scharf" wrote in message ... R J Carpenter wrote: "Highland Ham" wrote in message ... Can the Sirius radio be set to a different FM frequency? =============== If your Sirius Radio has an audio output and your car radio a cassette player ; you will be able to either homebrew or purchase an audio cassette shaped transducer with an audio input ,which you stick into the cassette player , such that by "playing the transducer" you can listen to its audio input being the audio output of the Sirius radio. Until recently, all of the sat radio boxes came with a fake cassette of this type. Since cassette players have vanished from new car radios, the FM modulator is the answer these days. I too have the interference problems using the FM output from my XM. Fortunately my car radio still reads cassettes. We have strong FM stations every 400 kHz around here, in some cases stations in the Balto/DC area are just 200 kHz apart. One of the serious problems using the FM approach is that one must set the audio level far below what you get from over-the-air FM stations. FM stations process their audio to be LOUD, yet do things to negate the 75 us preemphasis curve. Your XM/Sirius FM modulator doesn't have all that fancy processing, so you may have to set it as much as 10 or 15 dB lower in level to avoid overdeviating. The only really good way for sat radio is a direct audio connection of some type. The 2005 Dodge Caravan we just ordered comes standard with an AM/FM CD Cassette radio. Yup, it has BOTH a cd player AND a cassette player! BTW those cassette adaptors use a tape head run in reverse for the coupling. |
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