Blaupunkt Woodstock Dab 52 User Manual

  1. Blaupunkt Woodstock Dab 52 User Manual Download
  2. Blaupunkt Woodstock Dab 52 User Manual Free
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Blaupunkt Woodstock Dab 52 User Manual Download

This is where you will find the operating manuals, installation instructions, firmware and much more. DAB Autofun A-D G 01-E (A-D G 01-E) SMB Autoflex A-R T 01-M. Discover the product diversity of the Blaupunkt brand partners. All product and service information is only prepared and placed directly by our. Mar 13, 2007 Does anyone use the Blaupunkt Woodstock 52 DAB headunit with a memory card in it? I saw somewhere that the maximum size you can use is 256 MB but cant find it again. 2GB memory cards are really cheap now and wanted to know if anyone is using a larger card in this head unit (which is great by the.

Blaupunkt Woodstock Dab 52 User Manual Free

  • #2
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  • #3
    I have an idea but I was hoping someone else might jump in first, search ebay for FM transmitters, you can get a micro range one which would allow you to listen to your ipod on your car radio. The sound quality's usually not CD quality, but it is still pretty high.
  • #4
    I have an idea but I was hoping someone else might jump in first, search ebay for FM transmitters, you can get a micro range one which would allow you to listen to your ipod on your car radio. The sound quality's usually not CD quality, but it is still pretty high.

    These are illegal and do interfere with peoples radio reception in other cars.
  • #5
    I have an idea but I was hoping someone else might jump in first, search ebay for FM transmitters, you can get a micro range one which would allow you to listen to your ipod on your car radio. The sound quality's usually not CD quality, but it is still pretty high.

    I had thought of these, but haven't been too impressed with the sound quality on other peoples, and would rather a direct connection. It would also mean needing two of them, one for the Nano, one for the 3G or a battery operated headphone socket type one. The toss-up is between the 'easy' AUX in or the good sounding but nobody seems to have reviewed interface.
  • #6
    These are illegal and do interfere with peoples radio reception in other cars.
    Not if you use a clear frequency, which you are going to have to do anyway to get the best out of them, they are clear for use in places like the USA & New Zealand who don't prohibit the small devices. It annoys me that it's banned here, as it's a useful device because countless things have FM radios in them.
  • #7
    Not if you use a clear frequency, which you are going to have to do anyway to get the best out of them, they are clear for use in places like the USA & New Zealand who don't prohibit the small devices. It annoys me that it's banned here, as it's a useful device because countless things have FM radios in them.
    They will be legal in Switzerland this summer, being the first European country to legalise micro FM transmitters. Not that there is much point in using one on a Woodstock since it has aux-in which will always be better quality than a re-transmitted signal.
    Anyway, back on topic. I am also interested in the Woodstock iPod cable. If anyone has any experiences with one I'd also like to hear about it. I had a DAB Woodstock 52 for a couple of years but I recently upgraded to a 54 and noticed the cable on their web site.
    I currently use a simple aux-in cable to listen to external sources.
  • #8
    I have a Woodstock DAB53 and an Ipod. Last year i bought the Ipod interface unit and after trying it for about 5 minutes sent it back and swopped it for the standard aux in lead. The reason i did this was that the interface makes the Ipod behave like a CD changer. This means that you set up six playlists on the ipod and the songs in those playlists appear as six CD's on the head unit. Once the Ipod is plugged into the interface you cannot do anything with it such as manually selecting tracks using the menu. It's like when it is plugged into a PC and says do not unplug.
    Anyway i thought that was far too restrictive as i would rather select tracks as i go along rather than have to decide before i set off.
    I would agree with the comment about the FM transmitter. The aux input beats it hands down. I use a Itrip in another vehicle (Vauxhall Vectra) and (maybe because the antenna is mounted towards the rear of the roof) it's not great. I'm forever having to retune to find a better (less used) frequency and it's not that easy to find one that is clear for any length of time on a long journey. Aside from that the sound quality is much better and it costs less than £10 from here which is where i bought mine from.
  • #9
    Why make a simple job complicated.
    Bluespot.co.uk do a proper 'aux in' lead for the Woodstock with either jack or phono leads for well under a tenner. Sadly I had to pay 34 Euro for one that did the same job for my Grundig but it works fine. I have a 3.5mm jack plug in my glove compartment and can connect a minidisc player, MP3 or whatever and just select Aux on my Grundig menu. Simple and better than relying on an FM modulator.
  • #10
    I have a Pioneer Head Unit With The Official Pioneer cable i have connected a 2Gb Nano and 4GB Mini to The Unit and the sound quality from my ipod is second to none, The pioneer itself shows all the relevant info so you can leave your ipod in the glove box out of the way without losing concentration from the road, i payed 44.99 for the adapter which adapts to most new pioneer models with the i-bus converter, after using an i-trip first you just cant compare the two
  • #11
    Anyway, back on topic. I am also interested in the Woodstock iPod cable. If anyone has any experiences with one I'd also like to hear about it. I had a DAB Woodstock 52 for a couple of years but I recently upgraded to a 54 and noticed the cable on their web site.
    I currently use a simple aux-in cable to listen to external sources.

    The only place on the whole web discussing this seems to be http://www.elisetalk.com/forums/showthread.php?t=16199 , the 6 playlist limit can apparently be got round if you can use the MD software, which support upto 999 playlists, with 999 tracks per playlist, although this set-up only works with some Blaupunkt head units.
    If I hadn't read the linked thread I'd have probably went for it, but it's putting me off a bit. However have a 3.5mm lead and needing a seperate charger and using the iPods controls sounds a bit messy. Decisions, decision (all this is based on Halford being able to fix my Woodstock, which is away for repair (broken eject button)).
  • #12
    Thanks for that. I've got to say I'm thinking maybe it's not really what I wanted now. Looks like too many problems.
    I don't even have an iPod but I was thinking that if I could buy an iPod and leave it in the glove box as an (albeit expensive) 30GB hard disk for my car radio it would have been cool. But maybe there's a better and cheaper way to do it. It would just be nice to have my entire music collection in one place without having to change CDs or memory cards.
    (A few years ago I'd have laughed at the idea of ever needing more than 650MB of MP3s)
  • #13
    I have a woodstock 52, the blaupunkt ipod lead in all honesty is rubbish. I justify that with these points, sound quality is dire, popping and hissing, you have to manually put the software onto the unit yourself which then doesn't work as it should. 6 weeks of tring this and phoning the Blaupunkt technical line got no resolution so the company I purchased it from took it back, ironically the same day they had further complaints from other customers with the same issues. I have since brought a Aux 2 3.5mm adapter as Aux 1 is working my compactdrive (4gb microdrive) works a treat and fairly cheap from ebay.
    I have also found the transmitters to be only mildly effective, driving through traffic the signal completely disappears, even on the supplied cigar charger! Hope this helps anyone, ;-) :rolleyes:
  • #14
    Have you seen this? -
    http://www.nexxia.co.uk/ipod_mp3_adapters.htm
  • #15
    Have you seen this? -
    http://www.nexxia.co.uk/ipod_mp3_adapters.htm

    Too late - all the negative reviews put me off the iPod lead, so just went for a standard AUX in cable, no probs so far. Thanks for all advice.
  • #16
    .....the sound quality from my ipod is second to none, .

    What, second to a CD source?, or even for that matter, the Sony Walkman mp3 player or a Zen
    I'm not having that
  • #17
    As a mod if you want to save money, do what I have done - go to Maplin's, buy a pack of female blade crimp connectors (red is smallest size), about 80p a pack of 10, put the connector between pliers and make it a bit smaller and this fits well onto the blade connectors of the Blaupunkt. Then just connect some phono sockets the other end, or wire it straight to a 3.5mm jack for an IPod. Job done for a lot less than you could buy the other kits for.