Hi guys,
I'm not sure if this is the right place for this, if it's not, I apologize.
I have a group (of 4) that we fly together.
The pilot has expensive headphones (that can connect to BT for music), and he has 3 more headphones that are basic (very uncomfortable).
I have an idea that will give all passengers and pilot that ability to have music with affordable headphones $200-$300 (not $800+).
So here is my proposal:
Since this is my first post, I can't post links...
Option 1:
I found good noise canceling headphones for about $200-$300 that connects with a 3.5mm jack
And I found a 3.5mm to General Aviation adopter
But what I need is a way to inject audio into it, and there will be wires throughout the plane...
Option 2:
(Way more expensive, but a lot more versatile and flexible and can be used not only for Aviation (also for a gun range, for example) with practically unlimited headsets)
This idea revolves around BT headsets (about $300) and a Raspberry pi/Tablet running Linux or Android
(Yes, I will need the 3.5mm to General Aviation adopters as well...)
But here is my problem:
If I connect the Rpi/Tablet to the pilot's port, the traffic control will hear whom ever speaks.
So I need a way to control which headset is allowed to send audio out
Thanks for reading my post, if you have ideas of improvements please comment
I'm not sure if this is the right place for this, if it's not, I apologize.
I have a group (of 4) that we fly together.
The pilot has expensive headphones (that can connect to BT for music), and he has 3 more headphones that are basic (very uncomfortable).
I have an idea that will give all passengers and pilot that ability to have music with affordable headphones $200-$300 (not $800+).
So here is my proposal:
Since this is my first post, I can't post links...
Option 1:
I found good noise canceling headphones for about $200-$300 that connects with a 3.5mm jack
And I found a 3.5mm to General Aviation adopter
But what I need is a way to inject audio into it, and there will be wires throughout the plane...
Option 2:
(Way more expensive, but a lot more versatile and flexible and can be used not only for Aviation (also for a gun range, for example) with practically unlimited headsets)
This idea revolves around BT headsets (about $300) and a Raspberry pi/Tablet running Linux or Android
(Yes, I will need the 3.5mm to General Aviation adopters as well...)
But here is my problem:
If I connect the Rpi/Tablet to the pilot's port, the traffic control will hear whom ever speaks.
So I need a way to control which headset is allowed to send audio out
Thanks for reading my post, if you have ideas of improvements please comment