Further
Well-known member
So I'm about to pull the trigger on a bike intercom. Either the Sena SMH10 or the Scala G4. Both new. Both high marks on WebBikeWorld reviews.
Problem is, the wife and I are real picky about our music and don't want to even bother with all this unless we can use our great ER6 earphones. For some reason, none of the makers think this should be an issue for anyone, and they don't offer the ability to swap out their in-helmet speakers for earphones. All they'd have to do is make the speakers plug in separately from the mic, via a stereo mini-plug... but nooooo !
Cycle Gadget offers an adapter to make the Chatterbox XBi do this, but I really am drawn to the newer Sena and G4. So I wanna do something scary. I wanna take a wire cutter to the speaker cords of either the Sena or G4, and make my own custom adaptation. And since I'm doin' it, I might as well put both a jack AND a plug in place, so that on short day rides when we don't care about music we can have the simplicity of just using the in-helmet speakers for intercom. But then on trips when we gotta have great tunes, we can swap out for the ER6 earphones. How great would that be?
Here's my problem. I'm no audio tech.! I mean, I'm not an ***** (least not when most people are lookin') I've done some soldering. I'm pretty good with my hands when dealing with pesky little wires, but I really need some advice from someone who KNOWS what they're doin'.
First big question is does someone make a 3.5mm stereo mini jack for do-it-yourselfer's? I know RadioShack makes MONO ones you can pull apart and solder wires to and screw back together, but not sure about STEREO ones, which require 4 leads instead of 2.
For both the Sena and the G4, the speaker wires coming out of the units are individual wires, one for each speaker, (2 leads in each). So the next question is, if they're not color coded, how do I identify which lead is which within each of those 2 wires? If I get the Left/Right speaker reversed it's no big deal to me, but I need to know which are the "hot" wires, or the signal bearing wires, and which of the connectors within the jack I should solder them to.
And any other really brilliant suggestions would be appreciated too, but please don't tell me I'm crazy to screw around like this with expensive elec. equipment... I already KNOW that.
If I'm encouraged and really think I can do this successfully, I'll document it with some photos and write up a "How To". There have GOT to be other folks out there frustrated by the inability of such bike intercoms to use in-ear earphones.
Chris
Problem is, the wife and I are real picky about our music and don't want to even bother with all this unless we can use our great ER6 earphones. For some reason, none of the makers think this should be an issue for anyone, and they don't offer the ability to swap out their in-helmet speakers for earphones. All they'd have to do is make the speakers plug in separately from the mic, via a stereo mini-plug... but nooooo !
Cycle Gadget offers an adapter to make the Chatterbox XBi do this, but I really am drawn to the newer Sena and G4. So I wanna do something scary. I wanna take a wire cutter to the speaker cords of either the Sena or G4, and make my own custom adaptation. And since I'm doin' it, I might as well put both a jack AND a plug in place, so that on short day rides when we don't care about music we can have the simplicity of just using the in-helmet speakers for intercom. But then on trips when we gotta have great tunes, we can swap out for the ER6 earphones. How great would that be?
Here's my problem. I'm no audio tech.! I mean, I'm not an ***** (least not when most people are lookin') I've done some soldering. I'm pretty good with my hands when dealing with pesky little wires, but I really need some advice from someone who KNOWS what they're doin'.
First big question is does someone make a 3.5mm stereo mini jack for do-it-yourselfer's? I know RadioShack makes MONO ones you can pull apart and solder wires to and screw back together, but not sure about STEREO ones, which require 4 leads instead of 2.
For both the Sena and the G4, the speaker wires coming out of the units are individual wires, one for each speaker, (2 leads in each). So the next question is, if they're not color coded, how do I identify which lead is which within each of those 2 wires? If I get the Left/Right speaker reversed it's no big deal to me, but I need to know which are the "hot" wires, or the signal bearing wires, and which of the connectors within the jack I should solder them to.
And any other really brilliant suggestions would be appreciated too, but please don't tell me I'm crazy to screw around like this with expensive elec. equipment... I already KNOW that.
If I'm encouraged and really think I can do this successfully, I'll document it with some photos and write up a "How To". There have GOT to be other folks out there frustrated by the inability of such bike intercoms to use in-ear earphones.
Chris