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jona2125

Bluetooth audio

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I don't know for sure, but I think Sync can only use one bluetooth item at a time. Like if multiple phones are in the car, it will choose the primary. Have you gone to the Ford Sync Forum and searched? Probably better chance of someone with specific knowledge there, too.

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ummmm...I don't know the specifics for bluetooth, etc but I stream pandora through my phone on bluetooth audio, and if the phone rings, it pauses while I answer, and when I hang up it resumes playing without skipping a beat. (Technically, that's 2 bluetooth devices running, but it's in the same cabinet) It works just like it does when I have my iPod running in USB mode and having the phone ring. If it's not doing that and working correctly, it could be a setting in your iPod, or maybe there is something wrong with your Sync system. It's too bad the dealerships don't have anybody who really knows a damn thing about Sync.

Edited by FtLewis2002

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Going through the USB is just slow that's all. Plus I lose freedom of being able to leave my iPod in my pocket. And I did have them both connected as I stated. My iPod was playing music over bluetooth and then my phone rang over bluetooth and the music stopped and i took the call all through SYNC. It is possible I just forget how I did it.

 

Don't know...My iPod is the same speed through USB as it is through bluetooth. I have a touch also. Kind of a waste since it just sits in the center console 99% of the time.

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When you connect your phone via bluetooth, that's one bluetooth connection that's used for both phone calls and audio streaming (if your phone supports it). To Sync it's still just one bluetooth device. If you have your iPhone connected to USB and you're sending the audio to the DOCK connector (USB) then the phone itself is still connected via bluetooth so you should be able to send and receive calls via bluetooth also. Sync would stop audio playback during the call.

 

The only difference in using Sync to control the iPod or iPhone is that you have to use Sync to control it, not your thumb. On a Nav equipped vehicle you use the Nav touch screen so it's basically the same. I guess on a non-Nav vehicle it would be harder.

 

I'm thinking his issue is in his iPod. It works either way in my Fusion at the same speed. I streamed the ipod via bluetooth last night just to try it, when I usually use my phone for bt audio using Pandora or Slacker.

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I'm pretty sure when he said it was slow through USB he was referring to how you select and play songs and playlists. When you're used to doing it directly on the iPod with your thumb I could see how doing it through Sync might seem a lot slower.

 

Really? Mine is a lot faster than I can navigate it...I've got over 100 albums on mine, so when I say "play album screaming for vengeance" it is playing by the time the chick finishes saying "playing album screaming for vengeance". Maybe he's not pressing the media button twice and bypassing the "sync, please say a command" prompt?

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Bluetooth supports audio, yet Bluetooth audio requirement and audio specifications are not well defined today. Some parameters are not specified, some parameters are simple "copy and paste" from telephony standards - with no clearly defined references. A reader is sent to study one after another documents that define audio requirement as cleverly as original Bluetooth specification. They are confusing, most often without proper explanation. Even experienced designer may not be able to figure out easily if requirement refers to dBV/Pa or dBPa/mV for example. Audio Scientific has the right expertise in the Bluetooth audio design area and would like to fill such knowledge gap. Thus consider Audio Scientific as your Bluetooth Audio Specialist. We would like to connect every Bluetooth designer with audio resources, so final Bluetooth products provide good voice quality.

Nissan Van Parts

Edited by shubhinetwork

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Well I did get it to connect my phone and my iPod at the same time but the music was choppy as hell. And yes I meant slow two ways. It is slow to sit there and find music and to say commands would be nice but the damn thing never finishes indexing my music so I can never use SYNC USB at all anyway. I drove for 45 minutes waiting for it to index and it still didn't fully do it. I have I think upwards of 7,000 songs or something so I'm sure that has something to do with it too. That is why I use bluetooth because my friends can get in, use the iPod to find music without having to sit there and press a button to look through everything one-by-one. I just use the USB to charge my iPod or Phone. Eventually I'll do something like Pandora and just stream everything from my phone but I'll wait til the iPad comes out then I'll probly just use the 3g on that to do everything

 

Your iPod is having a problem. I have 5600+ songs and mine indexes in about 30 seconds after I update the iPod. You've got something that isn't indexed in the artist/album/track format that Sync uses. That's my guess anyhow.

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Yea idk whats going on with the usb but. it working now. Its working properly now. i have phone as phone and ipod as bluetooth audio. I can make calls and take calls. Call comes in, music stops, call ends, music resumes. All through sync through TWO bluetooth devices

 

In bluetooth mode, anything that's in an audio format will play regardless of the id tag on the individual file. Sync only recognizes that id3 tagging, or whatever it uses, so that's why you're having problems indexing through the USB connection. At least it recharges though, right?

 

Someday when you get really bored and have a few hours, open up your iTunes and check your songs. I believe that's what is stopping you from indexing.

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I know for a fact it only allows one bluetooth PHONE connection at a time. Perhaps it allows one phone and one ipod bluetooth connection simultaneously.

 

Yes, it will allow the bluetooth phone and bluetooth ipod connections from the same device, simultaneously. It will pause the ipod for incoming calls just like when you're on bluetooth for a phone, and usb connection with the ipod.

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But that's only ONE bluetooth connection, right? The phone and ipod functions use the same single bluetooth connection because it's the same device. I know when my wife's Razr is paired and I connect my iPhone, it disconnects her Razr. ]

 

jona2125 says he had his phone (HTC Hero) and ipod both paired via bluetooth at the same time and I don't think that's possible.

According to syncmyride.com you can only have one paired device at a time using bluetooth. You can have one bluetooth device and one usb device though.

 

I have had my iPod connected via bluetooth (16gb iPod touch with 3G) and my phone paired up (HTC Hero) at the same time. I think bluetooth uses a different frequency for the phone connections than the media connections. I can see Sync being limited to 1 bluetooth phone connection at a time, otherwise you could have 2 phone calls going at the same time...in theory.

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