A:AnswerThat type of transmitter is not the best to be used for musical instruments. There will be latency. I recommend you get an audio interface for your Fender and use a wired connection coming from the audio interface for best results. Or look into a Bluetooth audio mixing board. Professional audio amplifiers, like the Fender, deliver uncompressed sound that is not formatted or meant to be sent via Bluetooth. For best results however you want to feed the audio output of the Fender (mono or stereo) into an audio mixing board that can handle the uncompressed sound and apply the right compression, limiter, as well as EQ, and from the mixer you then send audio to your headphones via audio cable. Bu there are Bluetooth mixing boards but the pros in audio production tend to steer clear of such boards for now.
A:AnswerThis is the ABT05F. It is a Bluetooth transmitter only. So if you are sending the audio from the Xbox directly into the ABT05F and then using Bluetooth to send the audio to headphones then it should work.
A:AnswerThe transmitter can connect to Alexa speaker for the sound but for sound to work with both, it will depend on the TV model as some will disable sound when it is connected to a output.
A:AnswerProbably the headphones. We’re using Sennheiser 450BT headphones and the latency is only noticeable if the TV sound and the headphone sound is loud enough to be heard at the same time. If the TV is turned down, it’s not noticeable.
Cheap equipment = cheap performance. You get what you pay for. I’ve owned Sennheisers for 40+ years. My first pair lasted 23 years and I still could get parts for it.
You might have gotten a bad transmitter too. We’re on our 2nd Autek and the dropouts are getting worse. I’m switching brands. Cheap transmitter=cheap performance.
We’re getting the audio feed directly from the Xfinity cable box. That might be something to consider-getting the audio from the same source as the TV. Then there’s no possible delay in the TV relaying the audio. I’d try that first before spending $200 on Sennheisers. (But, trust me, zero regrets with Sennheisers.)
A:AnswerNo. You are probably trying to send audio to the truck radio. If so, then you need a Bluetooth receiver that can receive the audio from your phone. The transmitter will only work if you are trying to send audio out of the truck radio to a headphone or external speakers that are bluetooth enabled.
A:AnswerNo. If you are sending audio from a phone via Bluetooth to a soundbar then you need a Bluetooth audio receiver (not transmitter) that will receive the phone's BT signal, and then you hardwire the receiver (audio out) to the soundbar (audio in). Our ABC01F will do a better job of this since the unit can operate in both TX and RX modes for transmitting and receiving.
A:AnswerNo. I do not believe it will work. You need a transmitter/receiver. This unit is only a transmitter, meaning a one-way signal, out from the source it is plugged into to the paired device.
A:AnswerThe ABT05F is a transmitter only. For car stereo systems you will want to get a Bluetooth receiver or a device that is both transmitter and receiver. The AIS01F (iStream unit) is a dedicated receiver and will work better for car because you can now connect a mobile phone to the unit. Product page: https://aluratek.com/istream-universal-bluetooth-audio-receiver
A:AnswerYou need to make sure your Samsung TV has the analog audio out ports. The ABT05F will not work properly if it is plugged into the audio input ports.