I think we’ve all
been there, you know, the moment where your voice is hoarse from crooning; the
steering wheel is your drum set, and your leg’s uncontrollable tapping causes
the car to jerk. You’re in the zone and
your favorite song is blasting through your speakers. Yeah, people are looking at you funny in
other lanes, but you don’t care, you’re lost in the moment. There are several options for listening to
music in your car, today our blog discusses the options, feel free to choose
your fav!
iPod/Mp3 Player –
If you have your favorite tunes locked in on your iPod/smartphone/Mp3
Player-a-majig and your car has an Auxiliary connection, (most cars after 2006
have them) then you’re in luck. You can
purchase an auxiliary cable online (eBay has them as low as 1$) plug it into
the car and the other end into the headphone jack of your device. Push play on your device and viola, HD music
directly from your favorite jukebox.
Satellite Radio –
satellite radio is commercial and static free, music is beamed directly from
satellites in space. Two big companies,
XM and Sirius, have paid subscriptions with countless radio stations to choose
from. Music from all genres, sports,
traffic, talk shows (Howard Stern) and weather are all included. Purchasing the tuner for your car starts
around $75 bucks, with a monthly subscription of around $15. One drawback is that reception can be
deterred in cities with skyscrapers, but purchasing an external antenna will
fix the problem.
Car Audio
w/Cassette Adapter – if you own an older car, don’t panic! You can still play your mp3’s on the
road. By purchasing a cassette adapter,
you can play your tunes via a headphone jack.
First, plug your cassette adapter into your player’s headphone
jack. Then, insert the dummy tape into
your car’s cassette player. With $20
dollars you can use your modern mp3 player to play your tunes, rock on!!
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