Yes you can. You need to get a cassette tape adapter (many places sell these like Target, Bestbuy, Circuit City,....etc). You plug it into the mp3 player where the headphone would go and place the cassette where it is supposed to go. Turn on the radio and mp3 player and your ready to go.
Buy a headphone jack to have a red and white splitter. You can connect the headphone jack to your computer and the audio splitter to the aux. jack on your amplifier. The amplifier needs to be set on the aux setting. You can buy the headphone audio splitter @ Walmart for about 6 dollars.
Connect your headphone jack to the line in of your computer. Through windows movie maker record the music you want that's playing on the radio. Then use your conversion software to send it to your MP3 player. Playing FM on your MP3 player and recording it at the same time is only capable if you have that option in your settings menu. I've never seen this.
You will need two cassette players, an audio cable, and some time. Put the cassette you want to copy in a player (now on referred to as the first player), and plug in an audio cable to the headphone jack. Connect this cable to the microphone jack of the other player; insert the blank cassette in this player. Make sure the tapes don't need to be rewound. On the player with the blank cassette, press record. On the first player (with the material you want to copy), press play. Give the first player enough time to finish playing, and your tape will be transferred! Press stop on the other cassette player.
it has a mini headphone jack you can use.
Sustain hole? If you are speaking of a sustain pedal jack on a music keyboard, then, NO, it does not transmit audio. If your keyboard has a headphone output, you can use that. If it is just a controller with no sound selections, speakers or built-in synth, it does not make any sounds. What you connect it to will be the thing you will amplify.
Yes. Connect an audio cable to the headphone jack.
Is this a trick question? The size of a 3.5mm headphone jack is 3.5mm.Did you mean "is a typical headphone jack 3.5mm? Or is it smaller/larger?"A typical mp3 player headphone jack is 3.5mm.
You should be able to connect them to the headphone jack.
green headphone jack on the back of the computer
Buy a headphone jack to have a red and white splitter. You can connect the headphone jack to your computer and the audio splitter to the aux. jack on your amplifier. The amplifier needs to be set on the aux setting. You can buy the headphone audio splitter @ Walmart for about 6 dollars.
Put the metal end into the headphone jack. The jack is at the bottom.
does it have a headphone jack in the headunit/Radio if it does you can connect a mp3 and/or ipod to the stock radio.Ryan at Higher Limits Performance.com .I have the install harness on my website in the install area.www.higherlimitsperformance.com
Technically, yes. However, a headphone jack does not provide a great deal of power, so you would probably need an amplifier for the sound output to actually be audible.
Many televisions do not have headphone jacks anymore. Almost every TV that has a headphone jack will shut off its internal speakers when the headphones are connected. You should look at wireless headphones that will connect to the audio output of the television instead of the headphone jack if you need to use both at the same time.
A `standard headphone jack cable' usually refers to a 1/4" connector. The `mini' is what is normally found on items like a portable .mp3 player or CD player, which is to say, 3.5 mm. in diameter.
connect them together we a lead
Purchase a cassette tape that has a headphone jack line on the other end so you can plug that into the headphone jack of your iPod. Go to your local electronics store like Best Buy and pick one up.