My phone was successfully paired, but I'm still not able to play music or any media from my phone on the car bluetooth. It only connects to calls, but no music. Please help!!!
@@woaaahx827 thats so dumb... I'm able to play music via Bluetooth on my 2010 Toyota truck however the identical Same year in a Honda you can't and must rely upon a stupid aux cord. Such a damn shame, Honda sucks..
I'm pretty sure the 2010 Honda audio system was in general not Bluetooth music capable. Only phone call capable. The 2010 Honda Navigation radio was at the end of it's life. In 2011 a whole new Navigation head unit appeared and the Navi radios used for the 2010 were fully replaced by the newer design. When a car company designs a radio they tend to use it for 4 or 5 model years with only very small changes. So that means the Navi unit in the 2010 was in the last of its 5 year life cycle. So it must have first appeared in 2006. But the OEM designers have to design and test a new radio before it ever appears in a car. That usually takes 2 or 3 years.(Yes! That long.) That moves the start of design back to as early as 2002. So the Navi radio in the 2010 is circa 2002 technology. Once a new design is started it is simply not possible to keep changing the design during the design process to accommodate some new technology which has emerged in the general consumer market. It's because of the extreme environment in which cars must exist. The devices have to be tested to survive that environment. Freezing down to 50 below zero and preferably still working. Or if not then after thawing out return to full functionality. Same for the other temperature extreme. Full functioning at 160F. No damage to unit from being operated at 160F. Many of the electronic items you have in your house will not only not function in those temperature extremes but will suffer permanent damage just from experiencing those temperatures for any extended period of time. And then there is vibration. Serious vibration. Components will break off of circuit boards from just very slight but long term vibrations. And vibrations in cars is by no means slight vibration. There was a push to put big hard drives in car radios to enable owners to store lots of their music. So a hard drive that could survive automotive environment was sought. At the time a 500G hard drive could be bought for $80. But there were very few hard drives that could meet the automotive spec. And they were only about 10G and cost $500. Long before something suitable was available the Bluetooth music streaming made the whole hard drive idea moot. Remember that 5 year life cycle. All cars makers are not in sync on that cycle though they all have an approximately 5 year life cycle. So if the new 2010 Toyota radios were at the beginning of their 5 year cycle then the 2010 models would be based on about 2007 technology. Also, that 5 year cycle is not in sync for all categories of cars in a single car makers fleet. Sedans may have a different set of radios on a different 5 year life cycle than big SUVs. And another cycle for pickup trucks. In fact a car company I used to work with had about 3 or 4 sets of radios so every year or two one of the sets was starting a completely new redesign. These different sets were often administered by entirely different departments who rarely talked to each other.
@smbstressfest I usually don't idle while pairing, to avoid wasting fuel and to cut down on background noise. We were in the midst of a heatwave when I shot this, so yeah ... it was idling ... d'oh! =)
So where is the microphone for the hands-free calling? In the steering wheel?
@LHS91 Thanks, LHS! Some systems are more straightforward than others. I thought it might be cool to document this stuff for comparison's sake.
My phone was successfully paired, but I'm still not able to play music or any media from my phone on the car bluetooth. It only connects to calls, but no music. Please help!!!
Maya Maya did you find out how to play phone music
Maya Maya you can’t play music through the Bluetooth, it’s only for calls you’ll have to get an aux cord to play music from ur phone
woaaah x Thanks
@@woaaahx827 thats so dumb... I'm able to play music via Bluetooth on my 2010 Toyota truck however the identical Same year in a Honda you can't and must rely upon a stupid aux cord. Such a damn shame, Honda sucks..
I'm pretty sure the 2010 Honda audio system was in general not Bluetooth music capable. Only phone call capable.
The 2010 Honda Navigation radio was at the end of it's life. In 2011 a whole new Navigation head unit appeared and the Navi radios used for the 2010 were fully replaced by the newer design.
When a car company designs a radio they tend to use it for 4 or 5 model years with only very small changes. So that means the Navi unit in the 2010 was in the last of its 5 year life cycle. So it must have first appeared in 2006. But the OEM designers have to design and test a new radio before it ever appears in a car. That usually takes 2 or 3 years.(Yes! That long.) That moves the start of design back to as early as 2002. So the Navi radio in the 2010 is circa 2002 technology. Once a new design is started it is simply not possible to keep changing the design during the design process to accommodate some new technology which has emerged in the general consumer market.
It's because of the extreme environment in which cars must exist. The devices have to be tested to survive that environment. Freezing down to 50 below zero and preferably still working. Or if not then after thawing out return to full functionality. Same for the other temperature extreme. Full functioning at 160F. No damage to unit from being operated at 160F. Many of the electronic items you have in your house will not only not function in those temperature extremes but will suffer permanent damage just from experiencing those temperatures for any extended period of time.
And then there is vibration. Serious vibration. Components will break off of circuit boards from just very slight but long term vibrations. And vibrations in cars is by no means slight vibration.
There was a push to put big hard drives in car radios to enable owners to store lots of their music. So a hard drive that could survive automotive environment was sought. At the time a 500G hard drive could be bought for $80. But there were very few hard drives that could meet the automotive spec. And they were only about 10G and cost $500. Long before something suitable was available the Bluetooth music streaming made the whole hard drive idea moot.
Remember that 5 year life cycle. All cars makers are not in sync on that cycle though they all have an approximately 5 year life cycle. So if the new 2010 Toyota radios were at the beginning of their 5 year cycle then the 2010 models would be based on about 2007 technology. Also, that 5 year cycle is not in sync for all categories of cars in a single car makers fleet. Sedans may have a different set of radios on a different 5 year life cycle than big SUVs. And another cycle for pickup trucks. In fact a car company I used to work with had about 3 or 4 sets of radios so every year or two one of the sets was starting a completely new redesign. These different sets were often administered by entirely different departments who rarely talked to each other.
@smbstressfest I usually don't idle while pairing, to avoid wasting fuel and to cut down on background noise. We were in the midst of a heatwave when I shot this, so yeah ... it was idling ... d'oh! =)
old gen iPhone with what appears to be v3 firmware; im assuming from the slow bluetooth functionality :P v4 improved that
@Vitaminous Aye, yup.
Is that an iPhone 4? Nice :D
Are you alive?
@@عموري-ع6ك 💀
This was no help at all
I can not find the mulimedia page you started with
My car had already a code it can’t work 😭
zero zero zero zero...
btw this is very slow...