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Help I know the Incredible has a FM reciever but does it have a transmitter?

It would be really cool if the Incredible included a FM transmitter. Does anyone know if the Incredible has this capability? This would make the Incredible be compatible to stream audio to pretty much any car that is out there!

It ain't gonna happen. No matter what U.S. FM frequency you choose to broadcast the phone on, there are stations in the U.S. using that frequency. Besides that, the power drain on the battery would be huge.
 
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No, you can broadcast on a US FM frequency. I do it all the time with my iPod using an iTrip.

The reason I ask is I saw a really old post saying the Incredible would have one. I'm not sure if the support for it was dropped or what.

The OP was not asking about add-on devices, or devices for the iPhone. He was suggesting that the Incredible come with an FM transmitter as part of the phone itself.
 
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It ain't gonna happen. No matter what U.S. FM frequency you choose to broadcast the phone on, there are stations in the U.S. using that frequency. Besides that, the power drain on the battery would be huge.


I am glad you told me that. I will stop using my XM satellite receiver with FM transmitter to my radio today! I will also tell the other million or so that are doing the same thing that NoNoBadDog said that what they have been doing for the last 5 years is impossible so stop doing it.


If you don't know say you don't know-better yet just don't say anything at all.
 
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I am glad you told me that. I will stop using my XM satellite receiver with FM transmitter to my radio today! I will also tell the other million or so that are doing the same thing that NoNoBadDog said that what they have been doing for the last 5 years is impossible so stop doing it.


If you don't know say you don't know-better yet just don't say anything at all.

Harsh.. Hilarious and true, but harsh..
 
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I am glad you told me that. I will stop using my XM satellite receiver with FM transmitter to my radio today! I will also tell the other million or so that are doing the same thing that NoNoBadDog said that what they have been doing for the last 5 years is impossible so stop doing it.


If you don't know say you don't know-better yet just don't say anything at all.

Here is what I meant: Suppose you put a chip in the phone to xmit on FM. To make it even have a chance of not killing the battery immediately, it would be very limited to maybe only one or two frequencies (channels). Say you chose 92.3 105.9 as your otions. Here on Oahu, we have broadcast stations on those two freqs so the FM xmitter would be useless. That is what I meant. So, kids, you and sit down now and quit acting silly. We are talking about a smart phone here, not a dedicated XM radio unit.
 
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Here is what I meant: Suppose you put a chip in the phone to xmit on FM. To make it even have a chance of not killing the battery immediately, it would be very limited to maybe only one or two frequencies (channels). Say you chose 92.3 105.9 as your otions. Here on Oahu, we have broadcast stations on those two freqs so the FM xmitter would be useless. That is what I meant. So, kids, you and sit down now and quit acting silly. We are talking about a smart phone here, not a dedicated XM radio unit.

You wouldn't be putting a chip in the phone for each station. The transmitter would simply be selectable to the station. 105.9 is taken but 105.7 isn't. Simply select 105.7 for the transmitter and tada. 105.7 wouldn't have to be pre-programmed into the phone.

I'd say stick with the above posters recommendations. I know what you were trying to get at but its misguided.
 
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My Chocolate 3 has a FM transmitter and it kills the battery really badly. Also, maybe it's just my car, but I never get a clear signal, it's always a little fuzzy regardless of what station I'm broadcasting on.

You can buy separate ones that plug into the headphone jack that will work much better than anything built into the phone. I've got one for my iPod that works great; I think it's better than using one built into my phone as well, because it won't kill my phone battery and it actually charges the iPod while it plays.
 
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Here is what I meant: Suppose you put a chip in the phone to xmit on FM. To make it even have a chance of not killing the battery immediately, it would be very limited to maybe only one or two frequencies (channels). Say you chose 92.3 105.9 as your otions. Here on Oahu, we have broadcast stations on those two freqs so the FM xmitter would be useless. That is what I meant. So, kids, you and sit down now and quit acting silly. We are talking about a smart phone here, not a dedicated XM radio unit.

The Moto Droid has a FM Transmitter... :rolleyes:
 
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I am glad you told me that. I will stop using my XM satellite receiver with FM transmitter to my radio today! I will also tell the other million or so that are doing the same thing that NoNoBadDog said that what they have been doing for the last 5 years is impossible so stop doing it.


If you don't know say you don't know-better yet just don't say anything at all.

I know its off topic slightly but what model transmitter are you using. The few I've tried I've taken back because they just don't seem work.
 
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I would think that FCC approval would be far more lengthy for a full fledged phone with an FM Transmitter built in since thats just one additional data stream being put out by the phone (3g, 2g, wifi, etc)

As long as the transmitter falls within FCC guidelines (the power output has to be insanely low) it shouldn't take that much longer.
 
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I've tested a few of them and the sound quality is consistently poor.

Same here, I have tried the ones that plug into cigar lighters, and ones powered by batteries, none have worked for me. I don't have an aux in port or a cassette tape player in my corolla so FM transmitter is my only recourse besides installing a 3rd party cd changer adapter to add an aux port.

My XM receiver uses an FM transmitter, but it is very low power and it actually attaches to the antenna to accomplish what it does.

I've got to think that even if the Incredible had a built in FM transmitter, it would be entirely too weak to have any kind of fidelity.
 
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As long as the transmitter falls within FCC guidelines (the power output has to be insanely low) it shouldn't take that much longer.

Yea i figure that even with a low power rating and the shielding that the phone has, the output signal of the transmitter wouldn't be that wonderful unless you had some sort of external antenna. Just speculation here. Thanks for your input.
 
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Here is what I meant: Suppose you put a chip in the phone to xmit on FM. To make it even have a chance of not killing the battery immediately, it would be very limited to maybe only one or two frequencies (channels). Say you chose 92.3 105.9 as your otions. Here on Oahu, we have broadcast stations on those two freqs so the FM xmitter would be useless. That is what I meant. So, kids, you and sit down now and quit acting silly. We are talking about a smart phone here, not a dedicated XM radio unit.

The built-in FM transmitter in my Nokia n900 "smart phone" can transmit on "any" FM frequency, from 88.1 - 107.9...it's not limited to just 2 stations. I doubt that there is any US market which has radio stations for all of the 95 possible channels.

FWIW, I was able to stream a Real Audio feed via 3.5G, and play it via FM broadcast in my car, on a road trip from Northern VA to Philly. Using both radios, I drained maybe half my battery, which is similar to the Incredible's mAh rating (getting ~24hrs "my" normal use).
 
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