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Digital Lifestyle
Music, Audio, and Podcasting
Passing mixer audio to Bluetooth headset
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<blockquote data-quote="Slydude" data-source="post: 1703075" data-attributes="member: 131855"><p>Thanks to your suggestions I have this working. It worked a treat. I tested it using a 1/4" to 3.5 mm adapter connected to a cable with 2 1/4" connectors on the other end. Those connectors connect to inputs on the mixer allowing l and r channels. This is working nicely. Anything coming into the receiver can now be fed into the mixer. In order to pass the resulting audio to a Bluetooth headset on my mac I have to use something like Audio Hijack or Loopback that supports playthru. I haven't noticed any appreciable lag. </p><p></p><p>I realize this is kinda convoluted but it gives me a bit more flexibility than buying the Bluetooth adapter for my stereo. It was also cheaper than some of the bluetooth headsets that are capable of pairing with multiple devices. It only costs a few bucks for the cables and then only because I had lost the cable that would have worked.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Slydude, post: 1703075, member: 131855"] Thanks to your suggestions I have this working. It worked a treat. I tested it using a 1/4" to 3.5 mm adapter connected to a cable with 2 1/4" connectors on the other end. Those connectors connect to inputs on the mixer allowing l and r channels. This is working nicely. Anything coming into the receiver can now be fed into the mixer. In order to pass the resulting audio to a Bluetooth headset on my mac I have to use something like Audio Hijack or Loopback that supports playthru. I haven't noticed any appreciable lag. I realize this is kinda convoluted but it gives me a bit more flexibility than buying the Bluetooth adapter for my stereo. It was also cheaper than some of the bluetooth headsets that are capable of pairing with multiple devices. It only costs a few bucks for the cables and then only because I had lost the cable that would have worked. [/QUOTE]
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Passing mixer audio to Bluetooth headset
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