Both of them find the CCA without any issues, the sound is good and they can play my stored music directly to the CCA, my only disappointment is that both of them do not have an equalizer. The one I use now are Pulsar and Hi-Fi Cast, I paid for them as they are cheap and add free. I finally received my CCA which gives much more flexibility using different options for android music players for my phone. First I've never had any problems playing music from my Android phone using the Play-fi app, before or after the latest update. The second one I purchased is very stable and I can't really complain of any major issues.Ī few useful tips that I learned. OK guys here is my experience with the Powergate after using it for around two weeks now. The Arduino consumes only a fraction of a watt, so everything stays much cooler when I'm not using the amp. After two hours the Arduino will gracefully power down the PowerGate (sending it IR commands for mute and power off, before actually killing the power from the relay). When the Arduino receives the power toggle signal, it turns on the relay to power up the PowerGate, waits a few seconds, and then sends the IR signals to wake up the PowerGate and switch to the Aux input. When the relay is off and the PowerGate has no power (so it cannot respond to IR commands itself), the Arduino is "listening" for the power toggle command from the Klipsch's handheld remote. I added an IR receiver and IR LED to the Arduino. (I use Airplay 2 through an Airport Express connected to the Aux input I don't need the Play-Fi stuff unless they actually do a firmware update that would allow me to use Airplay 2 directly to the PowerGate.) I also was unhappy with how warm the PowerGate gets if you leave it on continuously, so I use a little Arduino to control a relay that provides power to the PowerGate. I bought the Klipsch PowerGate just to use as an amp.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |