Believe you me, I've wondered about this, why there would be two sizes
so close together, and how come I never come across plugs that don't fit
jacks.
> The common sizes are
>- subminiature jack 2.5 mm,
>- mini-jack 3.5 mm,
So since I have stereo headphones with a 2.5mm plug, and an adapter that
successfully converts that to 3.5 mm, one or the other plug should fit
without wobbling and I'll eitther get one channel in one ear or the same
channel in both ears, right? I think I've done that before without
involving an airplane.
So I'm in good shape!
>- phone jack 1/4" = 6.35 mm.
>
>> I have a bunch of other adapters. And other earphones. What size
>> plugs into computers?
>
>3.5 mm. Erroneously called 1/8" in some not-yet-metricated
Well, I'm not metricated myself. I'm probably anti-metrical, but if
that's how big it is, that's how big it is. It may be all European and
communist and all that to use metric, but it's worse to lie about the
size. So it should be called 3.5mm.
That Lebanese Radio Shack page unabashedly says 1/8". I thught they
used metric in Lebanon.
The Amazon page avoids using any dimensions, only says Airline and
Airplane, and has a bunch of competitors at the bottom of the page, but
the distance from one plug to the other is fixed. Might be better off
with the Lebanese one, which has two plugs on separate 2" cords
I ordered one from Monoprice last night, only 80 cents plus 2.25
shipping (and I added something else I needed to the order) but I forgot
that I'm leaving early Friday, not Friday night, so it probably won't
get to me in time.
>countries, even though 1/8" would be 3.175 mm.
Thanks.