When the NO SUPPORT, NO SUPRT or --:-- error message appears in the display of the car stereo and the music playback stops, unplug the USB device, wait approximately one minute, then plug the device back in again. Doing this will reset the USB connection and should correct any issue that may have occurred when you first connected the USB device. If this does not work, disconnect the USB device and power it off. Turn the USB device back on and then reconnect it to the car stereo.
This post is to help other Windows 10 users who are having trouble with enabling stereo mode after bluetooth pairing. This may also work on WH-1000XM3 and WH-1000XM5. This has not been tested on Windows XP/Vista/7/11 or other operating systems.
So I have a 2007 Malibu VLX with a sony head unit and 2 sony remote controllers. Last night my head unit decided to take a big dump right before the holiday weekend. Do I need to use a sony head unit to make the remote controls on transom and under dash work? Does any one have a better alternative to the sony head units as it sounds like they are plagued with issues...
I upgraded my amps over the weekend and was so Proud of how everything looked. Everything was working perfectly and even had it tuned perfectly. Come back the next day and the head unit isnt powering up. i pulled it to see if it was a bad connection (i was hoping), but after redoing all the connections still no luck. I was trying to find my exact model of sony headunit but it appears that they have disappeared off the interwebs
I ripped the stereo out and took it to a local stereo shop to see if I was going mad or not. They for a fee did a check to see if it was a power issue or if the stereo had given up. Sadly the stereo decided to throw in the towel... they were happy to recommend a 250 head unit haha. That said the sony head unit I had 4 RCA outputs and it doesnt look like ANY sony units do that any more... this could get challenging in a hurry.
The head unit its self is confusing at first - there are 10 different input modes (aux, usb, bt phone, bt audio, pandora, etc...), and reconnecting with bluetooth for audio, you have to select bluetooth audio, then hit the pause button. Once you get past all of that, it works...and you get to keep the sony remotes.
I also have the 2 remotes that I was concerned were no longer going to be supported by the head unit... i have that head unit on order from Amazon so will keep you posted how it shakes out. Wish they kept their former technology and just sold for cheap... who wants to pay 180 for a sub par stereo...
What remotes do you have? If theres a chance that an order remote will work with a new head-unit, sony gives you the best odds. The problem is, sony has slimmed down their marine offerings that actually support a wired remote.
Hello, I'm facing strange audio issue on my Sony KD-49XG9005, wonder if someone experienced something similar.
I have 2nd gen Sonos Beam connected to HDMI-ARC and NVIDIA SHIELD TV PRO (2019) in other HDMI port on the TV. Shield is the default input, I don't use anything else. I'm using Shield's remote (and HDMI-CEC) to turn everything on and off.
When I turn my stuff on, the TV sends audio in stereo PCM to Sonos Beam. I have to turn it off and on again to get Dolby Digital to Beam. It seems to be happening only after the system was off/sleeping for a period of time.
Shield has Dolby audio processing turned on.
TV has following audio settings:
Audio output -> Digital audio out -> Auto 1
Input-specific Sound settings -> Dolby Digital Plus output -> Dolby Digital Plus (for both HDMI ports used).
Can't find anything else that would be related to it. Is there some settings I might have missed? It's a bit annoying to do this on/off/on to get the desired audio output. Thank you!
I'm looking for a stereo mic to use primarily on my A7RII that can plug into the mic jack. I'm looking into Sony's ECMXYST1M that can mount on the MI hotshoe, with the audio signal plugging into the camera's mic input.
I rendered a small section of a MP4 video using Sony XAVC Intra. MediaInfo showed two separate audio streams, each one channel. When I loaded the rendered MXF file back into Movie Studio and played it, it was definitely stereo. I could also hear the stereo when I played the MXF file in VLC.
My made file has two mono channels which together are stereo sound, placed back on my Vegas Pro it shows both left and right in one audio track that I can, when I should wish, change in left , right, etc. Look
Thanks for the replies, guys. My media is definitely stereo on the timeline. It renders as stereo using other codecs (including Sony XAVC *Long*) but plays back as mono in my media player when I render as Sony XAVC Intra. I'll try loading the XMF back into Movie Studio to see if it sees both channels.
@Musicvid - thank you! It turns out that's the answer; the codec puts stereo as dual mono. Grr. Isn't it weird that MXF Intra has "dual mono" while most other codecs (including MXF Long) use a single stereo track.
That were @3POINT and I telling you all the time. Your question was if that is stereo OUTPUT and not if it is a stereo channel.
So next time read your own question better or ask another question if you mean something else.
Thanks j-v, 3point and KenB! Much appreciated. Unfortunately it wasn't clear to me that you guys were giving me the answer. I did think my question was fairly clear that I was getting mono audio instead of stereo - whether it be a channel, track or "output". The confusion, of course, is it was stereo but split into 2 separate mono channels. This was made clear to me by how Musicvid answered the question. But yes, you, KenB and 3point lead me to try pulling the rendered clip back into Movie Studio so I could see that, in fact, the left and right channels are there. Thanks again guys. You rock. :)
I'm new to Linux, so I hope I'll be giving you helpful info here.On my last (recently deceased) laptop, I was running Ubuntu 14.04, and on that system my bluetooth Sony MDR-ZX770BT stereo headphones worked beautifully.
The "Stereo" device is technically known in Bluetooth jargon as "Advanced Audio Distribution Profile", or with an acronym A2DP. It is optimized for transferring 2-channel stereo sound with good quality in one direction only.
Enjoy the sweet sound of vinyl, or streaming from your digital music collection using the SONY STRDH190 2 Channel Stereo Receiver with Phono Inputs and Bluetooth.The perfect match for music lovers seeking a stereo system with classic sound from all your music sources.
Walkman cassette players were very popular during the 1980s, which led to "walkman" becoming an unofficial term for personal stereos of any producer or brand.[6] 220 million cassette-type Walkmen were sold by the end of production in 2010;[7] including digital Walkman devices such as DAT, MiniDisc, CD (originally Discman then renamed the CD Walkman) and memory-type media players,[8][9] it has sold approximately 400 million at this time.[7] The Walkman brand has also been applied to transistor radios, and Sony Ericsson mobile phones.
The Compact Cassette was developed by the Dutch electronics firm Philips and released in August 1963. In the late 1960s, the introduction of prerecorded compact cassettes made it possible to listen to music on portable devices as well as on car stereos, though gramophone records remained the most popular format for home listening.[10]
Sony cofounder Masaru Ibuka used Sony's bulky TC-D5 cassette recorder to listen to music while traveling for business. He asked executive deputy president Norio Ohga to design a playback-only stereo version optimized for walking. The metal-cased blue-and-silver Walkman TPS-L2, the world's first low-cost personal stereo, went on sale in Japan on July 1, 1979, and was sold for around 33,000 (or $150.00).[13] Though Sony predicted it would sell about 5,000 units a month, it sold more than 30,000 in the first two months.[10]
Culturally the Walkman had a great effect and it became ubiquitous.[37] According to Time, the Walkman's "unprecedented combination of portability (it ran on two AA batteries) and privacy (it featured a headphone jack but no external speaker) made it the ideal product for thousands of consumers looking for a compact portable stereo that they could take with them anywhere".[10] According to The Verge, "the world changed" on the day the Walkman was released.[38]
In German-speaking countries, the use of "Walkman" became generic, meaning a personal stereo of any make, to a degree that the Austrian Supreme Court of Justice ruled in 2002 that Sony could not prevent others from using the term "Walkman" to describe similar goods. It is therefore an example of what marketing experts call the "genericide" of a brand.[6]
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