My jack is bended... :( the 3.5 mm one. the one that already connected with the headphone. how do i fix it? do i need to go to a music shop? or i can fix it myself?
- If you need clarification, ask it in the comment box above.
- Better answers use proper spelling and grammar.
- Provide details, support with references or personal experience.
Tell us some more! Your answer needs to include more details to help people.You can't post answers that contain an email address.Please enter a valid email address.The email address entered is already associated to an account.Login to postPlease use English characters only.
Tip: The max point reward for answering a question is 15.
<p>You can use the 3.5 mm headphone jack on the Touch LG ENV to
an audio device via an auxiliary input. If the audio cable is connected, the
phone automatically updates all sounds cable. Then you can play music from the
music player devices, such as car radios and systems external speaker. The 3.5
mm audio jack is a stereo connection, and is the audio standard for many
electronic devices. <br />
<p><br />
<p>1. Connect one end of the audio cable to the 3.5 mm
headphone jack on the Touch LG ENV. <br />
<p><br />
<p>2. Connect the other end of the cable into the auxiliary
input device you are connecting. <br />
<p><br />
<p>3. Change the input of your audio device to take extra. Car
radio, press the AUX button. See the device manual for specific instructions. <br />
Instructions
1
Set up the transmitter. Wireless headphones rely on a transmitter that sends audio via infrared or radio waves to your headset. Use the digital audio output (coaxial or optical), RCA outputs (red and white) or headphone jack on your TV to connect the transmitter. The connection will depend upon which outputs are available on your TV and/or the transmitter.
2
Use an RCA-to-headphone adapter. If you don't have a headphone jack on your TV and the transmitter includes only a headphone connection, connect an RCA-to-female headphone connector. This will allow you to plug the wireless transmitter into the female headphone end and then hook the RCA ends into your television's audio outputs. You may also need a 3.5 mm (mini jack)-to-1/4-inch adapter if the headphone plug on the transmitter doesn't match the television jack.
Read more : http://www.ehow.com/how_4883556_use-wireless-headphones-tv.html
3
Set the transmitter on top of, or next to, the television. For infrared transmitters, you'll need a direct path between the headphones and the transmitter. Placing the transmitter on or near the TV will allow you to take advantage of the clear path you already have.
4
Plug in the transmitter and turn it on. Charge the headphones if necessary.
5
Turn on the headphones. Adjust the volume and settings and you're ready to watch TV.
Read more : http://www.ehow.com/how_4883556_use-wireless-headphones-tv.html
If you are still working on the question you asked about. This is what I would do. One of two things:
First: purchase an adapter that goes from your laptop 3.5 mm headphone jack to the microphone input if there is one.
Second: Would be to purchase what is called a "Cassette Tape Adapter". This will take your 3.5 mm headphone jack and play it through your cassette tape area of your stereo.
I hope one of these is a solution that will help you. -- wicc --
What type of headphone connector do you have? The Yamaha keyboard headphone jack is a 3.5 mm stereo jack (like on a computer headphone jack). So if the headphones have a 1/4" plug, you need a 1/4" to 3.5 mm adapter.
This device has fragile connectors in the headphone jack. Most of my headphones don't cause any trouble, but one of them always bends the contacts back so other headphones don't work properly.
Symptoms of this problem are: the sound becomes quiet; some frequencies are muffled or inaudible (especially vocals and mid-range); no stereo effect. To be certain that this problem is with the device and not the headphones, try it with a different set of headphones. If the problem remains, the device is damaged.
Unfortunately, the only solution is to open it up and bend the contacts back into the headphone jack so they can connect to the plug properly. This is an advanced maneuver, and you are very likely to break the device permanently if you attempt it. I've been doing this kind of thing for years, and this device was one of the most difficult to work with. Fixing it will be fun for bonafide hardware hackers, but everyone else will be better off just getting a new one. Give the old device to a kid who likes messing with electronics... they can probably re-purpose the battery and the case. :)
Hi, this seems to happen on a lot of mp3 players , usually when you wiggle the headphone in the jack the sound cuts in and out, its the result of the headphone jack bending the metal contact inside the player or can be due to a build up of dirt/ grime in the socket.The problem generally gets worse as time goes on if you have tried it with different headphones still get the problem and its still under warranty I would get on the apple site or down to you local apple centre and try and get a replacement. Sometimes a spray of deoxit (plastic conductive lubricant /cleaner) in the socket does the trick , but I would strongly reccomend trying to get a replacemnt
sounds like an internal problem
like a bad connection
if you have the skill, you could pull it apart and resolder the parts around the earphone output jack
hope this helps!
Hi,
I believe there is something wrong, its a normal stereo socket.
I use differend 3.5 to 2.5 adapter (standard, from the shelf)without any problem to connect an FM Stereo-Transmitter.
The best solution to connect your car radio, its wireless.
regards JK
×