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Neil Allison wrote:
but I haven't seen any receiver for them that could be plugged into an aircraft radio microphone input. On paper the Jabra A210 looks close to what you would need to pair with a standard bluetooth headset: http://www.jabra.com/JabraCMS/NA/EN/...A210/JabraA210 You'd probably need to make a 2.5mm socket to Aviation radio jack adapter lead to connect it to a radio. The suggested temp range -10degC to 45degC and yet another 2 Li-Ion batteries (headset & receiver) might conspire to make a cool solution possibly more trouble than its worth? Seems like it. The ideal solution would be a small receiver that could be powered by the bias voltage on the radio microphone input, so a battery or power connection wasn't needed. Maybe some radios will have BT built into them, and even the standard aviation headsets will go cordless. In the meantime, I'll just have to envy the mobile phone users that walk around, apparently talking to themselves like a homeless person. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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