iPod Car Accessories

Belkin Tunebase FM Transmitter with ClearScan for iPod

3 Responses to “Belkin Tunebase FM Transmitter with ClearScan for iPod”

  1. Augusta says:

    I got this last night (Monday November 4th, 2007 @ 2:00AM)

    1st.
    I took it out of the box, found the right adapter that best fit my iPod
    (Cassic 160GB)and installed it. Well there are two parts. One is the Cradle, which holds it on the sides and the Pad, which goes in the back of the unite that keeps it from moving forward. With both of these in place I have a good tight fit for my iPod.

    2nd.
    The “ClearScan” feature does not work all that well. Every time I used it the unite kept finding a station that was occupied or sort of had a station using it. So I did it manually. I found a nice clear station 104.3

    3rd.
    I and noticed that there are two buttons a 1 and 2 button that lets you preset stations that you’ve found to be clean and clear and store these in memory for later use. I would like to use them, but every time I pressed the 1 button, it went to 107.3 which has a station in it already. The 2 button also has the same station as its preset. I can not get it to reprogram and thus, this feature is useless.

    4th.
    The unit does a good job at charging your iPod.

    5th.
    There is a feature called “Pro” and it boost up the sound and I think the transmission signal of the unit. There is “normal” that gives you a good but not great signal. I tried Pro 1 and its not much better than Normal.
    I’ve found that Pro2 and Pro work best. With Pro it sounded as good as if I had been at home listing to my iPod through my stereo.

    (note: on the unit their is a button that says “Pro” and on the display it reads as Normal, Pro1, Pro2 and Pro with a .o0(Thought Bubble)0o. out beside it.)

    6th.
    I like the arm that the unite rests on, stiff but very flexible. The cigarette lighter plug makes for a good anchor and good placement in my car.

    So in closing, it’s good but not great. I like it, but its got a few buggs that I’m going to have to call the company over.
    (more on that later.)

    I just got off the Phone with Belkin, (Tech Support in the U.S. 1-800-223-5546 ext. 2263)
    The lady I talked with was VERY helpful.
    (1)The way you set the presets is to, Find a good empty station.
    (2)Pick between button 1 or 2, then press down on the 1 or 2 button until you hear a plink sound(about 5 seconds).
    (3)You will see that station has “Preset1 or Preset2″ over the station numbers on the display.

    I looked all through manual and it never did say anything about how to reset the 1 or 2 button to another station. This is something they really needed to put in.

    After having this 14 days (Tuesday November 18th 2007 9:16 p.m.) Here are a few observations.
    1.
    When I place my iPod into the cradle and line it up with the data/power port; the unit will turn off the sound on my iPod and let a preset volume level come into your deck, thus you’ll be able to control the sound level from your deck with no tweaking needed.
    2.
    When driving I found the unit to pick up on interference from my car’s motor. Here’s the good news, it’s not so bad that you can’t enjoy your favorite Podcast or music.
    3.
    When you’re not moving there’s no sound problem.
    But if the station you’ve picked out is too close to another station then you will really know it.
    Case-in-point 101.1 is used but 101.3 aren’t.
    So you pick 101.3, but here come 101.5 bleeding over into your 101.3. I’ve found that if you can, pick a frequency that has at least two clear stations out either side of it.
    Like so, 103.1 clear & (your station)103.3 & on the other side 103.5 also clear.
    I don’t know if this will work for you, but for me it works well enough.

    p.s.
    I’ve found that this transmitter has an odd way of acting as a signal booster for weak stations. So, a station that you could not pick up at all magically comes in just enough and makes that empty spot in the dial not so empty. It’s great for Dallas stations that I can almost get. But it’s that much harder to find a empty frequency. (March 19, 2008)

  2. Vivica says:

    I recently purchased this unit as a set with a wall charger at Costco for $[...]. I have used three other units from Belkin TuneCast, Kensington 33169 Digital FM Radio and Transmitter for iPods, and XtremeMac AirPlay. The Airplay was for the original remote connector and worked good on my iPod Photo until my daughter broke it on a road trip. I bought the Kensington at a special price and it was not as powerful and therefore did not work as well. The Belkin TuneCast was a joke, but was universal since it used a 1/8″ male connector.

    The Belkin Tunebase is in a whole new category by itself. It is not because of the built in dock for charging or the extension arm to see the display or the 1/8″ jack to use the Aux port on new stereos or the ClearScan FM selection process, but the Pro 2 power level for the FM transmitter. The Tunebase has three different power levels and this is what allows the unit to over power even co-located stations or distance weak ones that other transmitters can’t. The ClearScan is the second best feature because it does do a good job of finding empty stations. The Belkin Tunebase is not perfect, especially in big cities like LA, but it does work well and is easy to use. Just hold down the button below the display and it will display in a second a new frequency that you tune your car stereo to. It does have two station memory for your favorite stations that work.

    The only reason I did not give it a full five stars is because the memory and power level buttons are on the sides are not labeled from the front and I accidently push the wrong button sometimes and the price is a little high. I am real pleased with the unit and would recommend it to others if you use a unit like this a lot to justify the price. Since my package at Costco came with a wall charger and sync cable as well as a mini USB charge cord, I thought the $69 was a reasonable price. If the price is over $[...] for just the transmitter, that might be too high for even a quality product like this.

  3. Edge says:

    FM Transmitters seem to be a “hit or miss” affair. It really depends on which one you buy, where you live, and what brand of car stereo you have. I have an older middle/high end Clarion CD player. I bought the “Tunebase” and tried several times across four days to get it to work with no success. I’m not one to ignore the instruction manual, but found other’s who reviewed it were correct. There are indeed procedures left out of the manual. On the useless yet positive side, its attractive and looks well made. I think if you live in a less radio congested area, you’ll be fairly happy with this unit.

    My first attempt was Monster’s “iCarPlay Plus” FM Transmitter. It worked, but not very well. I had to double my stereo’s regular listening volume, but of course this also raises the noise floor. This has the drawback of having to remember to turn down the volume every time you disconnect your iPod or get BLASTED.

    Your best course of action (if you want the best possible sound quality) is to replace your car stereo with one that’s already iPod compatible. I know, I don’t want to either because I spent quite a bit on the one I have, but oh well. Don’t bother if your stereo is a tape player. Those cassette tape adaptors with the wire coming out of it work great. They transmit good audio to the play head with no RFI (radio frequency interference).

Leave a Reply




Powered by Yahoo! Answers