It is over-modulating. That means it is too loud for the transmitter to transmit. Just turn it down a bit until it sounds clear, even on louder spots of the music. Some transmitter have a modulation guage which tell you how close you are to over-modulating. If you come along this, you want to keep the volume just below over-modulation ( on loud parts ). That way, it is load enough to hear it clearly, but not overly too load for the transmitter to transmit properly. Extreme over-modulation over a period of time can damage parts in a transmitter, but that is repairable and only if it has been over-modulation for a semi-long period of time. It is over-modulating. That means it is too loud for the transmitter to transmit. Just turn it down a bit until it sounds clear, even on louder spots of the music. Some transmitter have a modulation guage which tell you how close you are to over-modulating. If you come along this, you want to keep the volume just below over-modulation ( on loud parts ). That way, it is load enough to hear it clearly, but not overly too load for the transmitter to transmit properly. Extreme over-modulation over a period of time can damage parts in a transmitter, but that is repairable and only if it has been over-modulation for a semi-long period of time.
you can copy but not cut the songs, then you can have them both on your mp3 player and your computer. my mp3 player can store more than 500 songs and it is quite nice look. i bought it on shoppingkool.com, really cool.
To burn music onto an MP3 player from a computer, attach the device to the computer via the USB cable. Once the computer has detected the MP3 player, go to the file or folder on your computer where the music is stored, then cut and paste, or copy and paste the files. You can select multiple MP3 files at a time by holding down the Ctrl button. Go to My Computer and open the external device folder, then paste the files into it.
Yes, you can cut the end connector of the adapter and peel the 2 wires. The white wire is the positive and the black one is the negative, then open the battery place of the MP3, remove the battery and hook the negative wire to the spring and stick the positive wire to the other end. Adjust your adapter to 1.5V and run your MP3 player :)
you can download audacity and highlight half the mp3. (you need LAME.ENC.dll for the program to work). hope this helps!
you cant.But u can download replay converter for free.It lets u convert videos into plain mp3 audio
You could open the song you want to cut from into a program such as Wavepad (type name into download.com for a version), or audacity - both of which can be downloaded for free. Then cut out the bits that you don't want, and resave the file as a .mp3.
An FM transmitter will cut out all the static you hear when listening to a regular radio. Your sounds will be clearer than you've ever heard before. It truly is an amazing sound! Once you try listening to the radio with a transmitter, you won't ever do it without!
Cut each pie into eight pieces (cut in half, turn 1/4 turn, cut in half again, turn 1/8th turn, cut in half, turn 1/4 turn, and cut in half). Then, give each person five pieces.
No. Unless you cut them out of your head, cut them open and turn them inside out.
There is a program called mp3 direct cut. It is FREE to use.Here is the link: http://mpesch3.de1.cc/mp3dc.html
Yes.
gary player