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CHECK YOUR LOCAL CRAIGSLIST, EBAY, OR AMAZON. THEY SELL HEADPHONES THAT EITHER ARE FOR PARTS OR HAVE BOTH CUSHIONS AND BEING IN WORKING ORDER.
I ALSO SUGGEST FOR YOU TO CHECK:
http://www.jvc.com
OR
SEARCH GOOGLE BY INSERTING THE FOLLOWING WITHIN THE SEARCH BAR: " BUY CHEAP HEADPHONE CUSHION FOR AN; HA NC100 SET OF HEADPHONES"
IN YAHOO SEARCH BAR YOU CAN TYPE:
" DOES ANYONE KNOW WHERE I CAN BY AN HEADPHONE CUSHION FOR JVC HA NC 100 HEADPHONES,
OR
DOES ANYONE GOT A SET OF JVC HA NC100 HEADPHONES FOR SALE THAT MAY BE USED FOR PARTS OR EQUIPPED WITH BOTH CUSHIONS THAT ARE IN PROPER WORKING CONDITION?"
Indicates to me that the headphone socket is faulty, assuming that previous to this putting a headphone jack caused the main speakers to cut off. Not an expensive repair.
If your desktop computer can have speakers plugged in, there will usually be a set of soclets on the back, same size as a headphone socket, there are usually three together, a pink one, a blue one and a green one. The one for the speakers is the green one. (see image below for an example, circled in red)
If this is a laptop, there may be the same three sockets somewhere, or you may just be able to use the standard headphone socket on the laptop.
Depends on what connectors are available on the overhead.
It should have RCA connectors Yellow for video and red and white for audio. These will work OK.
The camera may have a small socket marked A/V out which requires a proprietary cable like a 3.5 mm headphone jack (three rings, video and stereo) on one end and RCAs on the other.
Try them in another device. If still the same contact the place where you bought them. If they work in another device, it could be your ipod socket is damaged.
It no doubt can be repaired, but chances are it's going to be pricey. The power input circuit will be blown for sure, and probably most everything ahead of it, since voltage came in on the ground side also (a 220V line is just 2 120 lines, and it's usually more like 228-240). You would be better off trying to get one off ebay, or on sale, than to repair this one. Sorry to relay the bad news. Of course, the headphones will still be good, that's the good news.
All you need is either a dock, which will keep the I-Pod powered up, or a 3.5mm plug to two RCA phono leads, which will also be needed for the dock, this plugs into your headphone socket of your I-Pod and the two RCA's into an aux socket on the JVC. You can then listen to it in Dolby Pro-Logic. You won't be able to listen in Dolby Digital, unless the I-Pod has Dolby Digital output, which will require a different lead.
Of course the sound source (music) would have to be recorded with Dolby Surround, to get the full benefit, but many are, they just don't say in the imformation given.
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