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TITLE :USA SPEC BT35 HON Honda OEM Radio Bluetooth Phone and Music Adapter ASIN : B008GWU8YW BRAND : USA Spec PRICE: $128.97 If not sure !!!!!! Check !!!!! |
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Most helpful customer reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful.
Does what it says on the box
By Benjamin Johns
Got this to use with my LG Nexus 4 on a Honda Fit 2013. I was totally bewildered how the stock Fit radio, in 2013, didn't have Bluetooth as an option; I'm not a power user, but my last car had it via an aftermarket stereo and I wasn't remotely willing to do without. USB audio is fine, but who wants to plug something in every time they get in the car?
I went with this rather than an external solution like the Belkin AUX Bluetooth unit because I wanted my power port free and at least some control over skipping songs via the stereo. The install looked pretty straightforward (no harness or anything; just a plug for the Honda's satellite radio interface), but I opted to bring it to a Best Buy for install anyway to get the mic installed without a bunch of hanging wires. They cheerfully got it running in 45 minutes or so, and aside from the tiny mic affixed over the mirror, you wouldn't know it was there.
The interface is barebones: you can accept or end calls, or skip tracks for music. That's really it. "Skipping forward" on an Android device usually starts playing music, and autoconnect works like a charm, so I can just get in the car and go without taking my phone out of my pocket. But there are a number of features standard on most bluetooth native stereos that aren't present here: You can't pause music; you can't bring up voice control (or Siri on an iPhone), you can't use the track digits on the stereo to dial your way through phone menus, the "announce" feature only does digits, not names, and the display information doesn't show what's playing; it's stuck with "CDC" and a cryptic series of numbers. You may find yourself reaching for the phone to pull up the stuff you want, which really, is what you want Bluetooth to AVOID doing.
The audio quality is good, though not mindblowing; I got some of the reverb others have mentioned but only ever notice it in audiobooks, and it's not awful. The mic is as good as any aftermarket bluetooth mic; it gets the job done, but be prepared to speak loudly and slowly, and no one's going to suspect you AREN'T in a car.
All in all, I was desperate to get Bluetooth in my Fit, and this did the job admirably; props to the development team for a clever product that does what's promised. But after installation, with the caveats, and given that the price is about twice what you'd pay for a decent entry-level aftermarket car stereo built with Bluetooth in mind...
If I had to do it over again, I would have sprung for a new stereo; even after getting a wire harness and paying a bit more for installation, the total cost would have ended up being about the same. If you're in love with the stock Honda stereo "if only it had Bluetooth," this is a great option and a solid cut above an Aux-in option or FM transmitter. But for the money, think long and hard about just replacing the stereo outright.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful.
Nice features, working okay after a replacement
By B. T. Cox
I bought this to replace a Belkin Bluetooth to Aux adapter in a 2010 Civic w/o nav. The first unit I received had issues with consistent sound quality. The quality would drift from okay to horrible. By horrible, I mean the sound was hollow and tinny. The issue was particularly acute when listening to audio books. The same problem occurred with music, but was not as obvious. A quick search showed other users having this issue as well.
After an exchange, the new unit has much better sound quality. Not perfect, but very tolerable. I still find it annoying that the volume on my car stereo has to be turned up quite a bit when using the BT35, even with the phone's Bluetooth volume on max. This means the volume is blaring if you switch to, say, FM radio after listening to music through the BT35 at a reasonable volume level. Likewise, if you are listening to the radio, when a phone call comes in, you have to adjust the volume up to hear clearly.
After pairing, the device automatically connects to my android phone when the car is started. When a phone call arrives, the radio automatically switches over to the phone input and verbally announces the number of the incoming call. The auto switching to the phone for an incoming call is the killer feature for me. Call sound quality is good and road noise does not appear a problem. I routed the mic cable up the driver side pillar above the headliner and stuck the mic to the bezel of the map light, and I don't know if the mic location is a factor or not. As a side note, the text display on the radio does NOT show the incoming number.
As far as installation goes, it was fairly straight forward. The cable provided to connect to the radio is plenty long, so I mounted the device using command strips to the underside of the ac duct closest to the driver's side door (there's plenty open space behind the dash and above the coin pocket); this turned out to be fortuitous, as it only took a couple of minutes to snap out the lower dash panel and swap the device when the replacement arrived. A search located a online video that showed how to disasssemble the dash and remove the radio. The mic cable is long enough to give reasonable flexibility on placement. As mentioned earlier, I mounted the mic on the map light bezel. A search for "map light replacement" showed how to remove the map light to only have the cord show only where it loops out of the bezel.
Update: (1) I ended up swapping out the interconnect cable in addition to the replacing the interface box in an attempt to improve the sound quality and I did notice some improvement. In short, the improvement in sound quality WAS worth disassembling the dash a second time. (2) The mounting adhesive on the mic started releasing after a couple of weeks. If you are doing a new install, it is probably a good idea to go ahead and replace the mounting adhesive when you do the install to save yourself some hassle down the road.
15 of 17 people found the following review helpful.
Do not buy if you want to listen to music!
By D G Amos Jr
Installed in 2011 Honda Ridgeline. Only plus; Extremely simple to connect to radio.
The bluetooth phone quality is decent but the audio for listening to music is horrible. It sounds like you are listening through two tin cans connected by a string. I contacted Onlines Best Deal and they told me they didn't have tech support and recommended I contact USA Spec directly. I contacted USA Spec and they told me and I quote, "...you lose fidelity and frequency response when you wirelessly stream music. A wired source will always sound better..." In other words, our product stinks for listening to music. You should use our wired source module.
They also attached link: [...] which basically says that because I bought it online through a "non-authorized reseller", that it cannot be returned or replaced under warranty. DO NOT BUY THIS PRODUCT.
