Bluetooth on Vintage amps.

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I couldnt edit the title for some reason? Its supposed to say ''BlueTooth on Vintage Amps.'' Anyway, I bought a couple of No Name, cheap 4.2 version Bluetooth Transmitter/Receiver modules to see how they would go? Well, they turned out to be way above expectations, in fact, they are excellent, the only thing I could pick on them about was if I left the Transmitter from my PC charging on the PC USB it would pick up the hard drive noise when listening to music. The internal batteries are supposed to last 8 hours but according to someone they only last 4 hours? Well, 4 hours is plenty enough time for me. I plug the Receiver on the amplifier into the amps aux and run its battery charger to the power strip. The Transmitter is plugged into the headphone jack on the PC. When I first tried these I tested them out on YouTubes Audiophile Test videos and I was blown away at the quality. HIFI Wireless Audio Bluetooth Receiver Transmitter 3.5MM RCA USB Music Adapter | eBay
 
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At the moment I'm using the USB-3 on my computer for charging the BT transmitter and a 5vDC 850ma output phone charger plugged into the power strip on the BT receiver end. Its all messy and complicated but the quality is crazy good in the end. lol
 
I'll get around to doing this when I've got the time, I have two Yamaha amps to fix in the meantime and a mobility scooter as well. Thanks for the advice Chris, it's appreciated. If it wasn't for this online help I wouldnt get very far at all?
 
One is an RX-497 stereo and the other is an RX-V430 5.1, the RX-497 had a failed film capacitor in the turn-on circuit but I popped/fried the DTC-144ESA transistor when checking things out? so I'm waiting for a replacement in the mail. The other Yammy has the same kind of problem. No turn on or display? I also have a recently acquired Sansui G-4700 that I'm going to recap and clean up the boards. It still sounds great, just a bit boomy on the bass. 🙂
 
Hi redrooster,
Okay, small receivers. Fun to work on and rewarding when you fix them.
Look for the AC detect cap on the RX-V430. It's often a low value electrolytic (like 1uF) in the power supply area, or near the CPU.

-Chris