Jaguar XF Audio Bluetooth A2DP
#1
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I took delivery of 2011 XF Premium a couple of weeks ago. Love it. I love the looks and the engine noise from the powerful 5 Litre.
A key thing for me was to be able to stream audio from my iPhone while still being able to use the cars own bluetooth for hands free phone. The XF (annoyingly) does not support A2DP which is what is needed for this.
Well, I am pleased to say that I found the perfect solution for $45. The Blackberry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway.
Amazon.com: BlackBerry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway for BlackBerry 8100, 8110, 8120, 8130, 8300, 8310, 8320, 8330, 8800, 8820, 8830, 9000 (Black): Cell Phones & Accessories
Yes, I know it is for Blackberrys, but it works fine for iPhone and presumably any other bluetooth device.
The device needs power which can come from the Aux power socket in the glovebox between the seats. Thus the device sits in the glovebox and you never even need to open it. That power socket is configured to turn off with the car so the device powers on and off when you start and stop the car.
What really pleasantly surprised me was that the iPhone (3G by the way) pairs perfectly with BOTH the car phone bluetooth AND with the Blackberry device. When I am listening to music and the phone rings, music mutes and the phone gets priority. After the call ends music comes back.
It couldn't work any better! This is way better than using the IPod cable and navigating through crappy folders on the main interface. I would love to hear if anyone finds this useful and tries it out!
A key thing for me was to be able to stream audio from my iPhone while still being able to use the cars own bluetooth for hands free phone. The XF (annoyingly) does not support A2DP which is what is needed for this.
Well, I am pleased to say that I found the perfect solution for $45. The Blackberry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway.
Amazon.com: BlackBerry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway for BlackBerry 8100, 8110, 8120, 8130, 8300, 8310, 8320, 8330, 8800, 8820, 8830, 9000 (Black): Cell Phones & Accessories
Yes, I know it is for Blackberrys, but it works fine for iPhone and presumably any other bluetooth device.
The device needs power which can come from the Aux power socket in the glovebox between the seats. Thus the device sits in the glovebox and you never even need to open it. That power socket is configured to turn off with the car so the device powers on and off when you start and stop the car.
What really pleasantly surprised me was that the iPhone (3G by the way) pairs perfectly with BOTH the car phone bluetooth AND with the Blackberry device. When I am listening to music and the phone rings, music mutes and the phone gets priority. After the call ends music comes back.
It couldn't work any better! This is way better than using the IPod cable and navigating through crappy folders on the main interface. I would love to hear if anyone finds this useful and tries it out!
#4
![Default](/forum/images/icons/icon1.gif)
I took delivery of 2011 XF Premium a couple of weeks ago. Love it. I love the looks and the engine noise from the powerful 5 Litre.
A key thing for me was to be able to stream audio from my iPhone while still being able to use the cars own bluetooth for hands free phone. The XF (annoyingly) does not support A2DP which is what is needed for this.
Well, I am pleased to say that I found the perfect solution for $45. The Blackberry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway.
Amazon.com: BlackBerry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway for BlackBerry 8100, 8110, 8120, 8130, 8300, 8310, 8320, 8330, 8800, 8820, 8830, 9000 (Black): Cell Phones & Accessories
Yes, I know it is for Blackberrys, but it works fine for iPhone and presumably any other bluetooth device.
The device needs power which can come from the Aux power socket in the glovebox between the seats. Thus the device sits in the glovebox and you never even need to open it. That power socket is configured to turn off with the car so the device powers on and off when you start and stop the car.
What really pleasantly surprised me was that the iPhone (3G by the way) pairs perfectly with BOTH the car phone bluetooth AND with the Blackberry device. When I am listening to music and the phone rings, music mutes and the phone gets priority. After the call ends music comes back.
It couldn't work any better! This is way better than using the IPod cable and navigating through crappy folders on the main interface. I would love to hear if anyone finds this useful and tries it out!
A key thing for me was to be able to stream audio from my iPhone while still being able to use the cars own bluetooth for hands free phone. The XF (annoyingly) does not support A2DP which is what is needed for this.
Well, I am pleased to say that I found the perfect solution for $45. The Blackberry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway.
Amazon.com: BlackBerry Remote Stereo Bluetooth Gateway for BlackBerry 8100, 8110, 8120, 8130, 8300, 8310, 8320, 8330, 8800, 8820, 8830, 9000 (Black): Cell Phones & Accessories
Yes, I know it is for Blackberrys, but it works fine for iPhone and presumably any other bluetooth device.
The device needs power which can come from the Aux power socket in the glovebox between the seats. Thus the device sits in the glovebox and you never even need to open it. That power socket is configured to turn off with the car so the device powers on and off when you start and stop the car.
What really pleasantly surprised me was that the iPhone (3G by the way) pairs perfectly with BOTH the car phone bluetooth AND with the Blackberry device. When I am listening to music and the phone rings, music mutes and the phone gets priority. After the call ends music comes back.
It couldn't work any better! This is way better than using the IPod cable and navigating through crappy folders on the main interface. I would love to hear if anyone finds this useful and tries it out!
Just curious, the blackberry device looks like it interfaces with the AUX jack in the car. I have a monster cable Icable (Monster® iCable® for Car (Mini to Mini) for iPod® and iPhone™) that I used in my lexus to connect my Iphone to the audio system. Would that not be the same thing without the hassle of connecting to bluetooth? I have also used it in the Jag and it works rather well but I almost always use the Ipod cable because it charges my phone, and while I do agree that the folders interface on the Ipod cable is terrible, if you use the AUX function you cannot control the ipod (at least changing songs) with the steering wheel controls which I really find advantageous. Just my opinion. Wish there was a way to use the ipod cable and use the actual interface on the ipod/iphone, that would be ideal.
#6
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I tried this on my car tonight. It is a 2012 XF. I had my blue tooth audio playing music from my Samsung galaxy S2. I then made a call using the voice commands. The music stopped, the call went through as usual. After the call completed, the music came back on.
Am I missing something or is it because I have a 2012?
Am I missing something or is it because I have a 2012?
#7
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I tried this on my car tonight. It is a 2012 XF. I had my blue tooth audio playing music from my Samsung galaxy S2. I then made a call using the voice commands. The music stopped, the call went through as usual. After the call completed, the music came back on.
Am I missing something or is it because I have a 2012?
Am I missing something or is it because I have a 2012?
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#8
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This is from my manual, it sounds like it supports HFP and A2DP. So is this new for 2012?
The Jaguar Bluetooth® system supports Bluetooth® Hands-Free Profile (HFP) Advanced Audio Distribution Profile (A2DP) and Audio Video Remote Control Profile
(AVRCP). Note: HFP and A2DP/AVRCP profile can be connected independently, so a phone can be connected via one, while a media device can be connected via the other, at the same time.
The Jaguar Bluetooth® system supports Bluetooth® Hands-Free Profile (HFP) Advanced Audio Distribution Profile (A2DP) and Audio Video Remote Control Profile
(AVRCP). Note: HFP and A2DP/AVRCP profile can be connected independently, so a phone can be connected via one, while a media device can be connected via the other, at the same time.
#9
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Hi - as i am sure many of you would agree, everything about the stereo and navigation systems on the 2011 XJ are awful. (Ridiculously slow/non-responsive touch screen, horrible menus that don't give any real control, settings that constantly jump around without reason, 1989-like technology entering addresses in navigation, maps that don't display anything relevant, worthless traffic display, etc. etc. etc.)
Is it advisable to rip that stuff out and put in a really high-end replacement that has navigation, good-sounding stereo, bluetooth antenna that doesn't suck, satellite radio antenna that can handle driving under a tree without losing signal, etc.?
Or am i nuts, and i'll void all kinds of warranty stuff, and there are really no high-end, appropriate looking systems out there that would fit in that hole?
thanks for your help - love my car but am completely bummed about the electronics
Is it advisable to rip that stuff out and put in a really high-end replacement that has navigation, good-sounding stereo, bluetooth antenna that doesn't suck, satellite radio antenna that can handle driving under a tree without losing signal, etc.?
Or am i nuts, and i'll void all kinds of warranty stuff, and there are really no high-end, appropriate looking systems out there that would fit in that hole?
thanks for your help - love my car but am completely bummed about the electronics
#10
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I find the nav system and general audio interface(s) in my 2011 XFR to be light years ahead of what was in my 2008 Audi S4 (awful) and a bit better than my 2009 Mazda CX-9. I am pretty sure that with this sort of thing it is a case of not being able to please all the people all the time. Is there a manufacturer out there that does this stuff brilliantly to the point where everyone agrees it is an excellent set up? I really don't have much issue with the Jag system. Granted, it isn't in the Apple league in terms of swift response and intuitivity but it does everything I need it to do!
I saw in the CX-16 concept that they just have a system that replicates your smart phone screen on a larger in-dash touch screen, and uses your smart phone as the system controller. This is the way forward in my view.
I saw in the CX-16 concept that they just have a system that replicates your smart phone screen on a larger in-dash touch screen, and uses your smart phone as the system controller. This is the way forward in my view.
#14
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What's the difference between using the A2DP adapter and plugging an iPhone directly into the AUX port? Does the Jag know the difference? Seems to me that the adapter is one more device, one more power consumer, one more thing in the chain that can go wrong. Am I missing something?
Thanks,
Mark
PS I bought the A2DP adapter and got it to work. Then my wife asked why I didn't just use the AUX port. I am an engineer, and she is a mortal. Therefore, I must have had a good reason, right? ;-)
PPS depending on the answer to my question, I may have a barely-used A2DP adapter for sale cheap quite soon.
Thanks,
Mark
PS I bought the A2DP adapter and got it to work. Then my wife asked why I didn't just use the AUX port. I am an engineer, and she is a mortal. Therefore, I must have had a good reason, right? ;-)
PPS depending on the answer to my question, I may have a barely-used A2DP adapter for sale cheap quite soon.
#15
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Doesn't using the USB to Apple Dock connection allow you to actually see the songs displayed on the screen, or did I misread that somewhere? A reviewer was complaining about how switching the songs worked. I didn't think that was possible via A2DP. It certainly is not possible using the AUX audio port.
That would be one reason I would prefer to use the actual iPod / USB connection.
That would be one reason I would prefer to use the actual iPod / USB connection.
#16
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Now that I finally have mine and have been playing around with it, the iPod port is much preferred over the AUX port for the reasons I stated above. Bluetooth adapters as far as I know are restricted to using the AUX port as well, so same problems. It's nice to be able to control the songs from the steering wheel rather than the phone itself.
One caveat, it only controls and displays iPod app songs for the iDevices. Won't display song info or allow you to forward in Pandora, for example.
Just ordered the Scosche passPORT adapter so the phone charges as well. Not the most advanced system, plenty of new cars and head units that interface with the actual Pandora app on the phone, etc. but it's good enough for me. With this car you kind of have to keep your eyes on the road and speedo anyway
.
One caveat, it only controls and displays iPod app songs for the iDevices. Won't display song info or allow you to forward in Pandora, for example.
Just ordered the Scosche passPORT adapter so the phone charges as well. Not the most advanced system, plenty of new cars and head units that interface with the actual Pandora app on the phone, etc. but it's good enough for me. With this car you kind of have to keep your eyes on the road and speedo anyway
![Wink](https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/images/smilies/wink.gif)
#17
#18
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This is from my manual, it sounds like it supports HFP and A2DP. So is this new for 2012?
The Jaguar Bluetooth® system supports Bluetooth® Hands-Free Profile (HFP) Advanced Audio Distribution Profile (A2DP) and Audio Video Remote Control Profile
(AVRCP). Note: HFP and A2DP/AVRCP profile can be connected independently, so a phone can be connected via one, while a media device can be connected via the other, at the same time.
The Jaguar Bluetooth® system supports Bluetooth® Hands-Free Profile (HFP) Advanced Audio Distribution Profile (A2DP) and Audio Video Remote Control Profile
(AVRCP). Note: HFP and A2DP/AVRCP profile can be connected independently, so a phone can be connected via one, while a media device can be connected via the other, at the same time.
Anyway, looks like the 2012 XF has better Bluetooth functionality than the XK.
#19
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Yes, it should work with nearly any phone, even older flip phones. Many mobile phones support A2DP which is an industry standard Bluetooth protocol. I have Bluetooth stereo in all my cars. I added it to my 1998 XJR and did a complete write up on that install http://j.roal.home.mchsi.com/X308Bluetooth.pdf. My old Motorola Z6c slider, V710, and LG Voyagers even supported A2DP streaming many years ago. I now have a Droid 3 and it works great.
In fact, if you use this or any other A2DP device with your Android phone, you should also install the app I created to handle the volume and several other things. It is on Android Market and it is free and open source with no ads. Just scan the QR code below or search Android Market for "A2DP Volume".
You can see the details of the app including all the source code here: a2dpvolume - For Android devices to automatically adjust the media volume on bluetooth connect and reset it on disconnect, and much more - Google Project Hosting
In fact, if you use this or any other A2DP device with your Android phone, you should also install the app I created to handle the volume and several other things. It is on Android Market and it is free and open source with no ads. Just scan the QR code below or search Android Market for "A2DP Volume".
![](http://home.mchsi.com/%7Ejroal/exe/QR.png)
You can see the details of the app including all the source code here: a2dpvolume - For Android devices to automatically adjust the media volume on bluetooth connect and reset it on disconnect, and much more - Google Project Hosting