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Edited by labrat - 9/16/11 at 2:58am
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I was asking about this to some other people, in other sites, and it should do no difference really using your phone as a WiFi-router or connecting to a WiFi LAN.
I did try connecting to my WiFi-router, and no interference.
Using my HTC as a WiFi router would incur more labor and setting up, so I did no do that.
But using it connected to my LAN over my WiFi router, at the same time connecting my IEM's to an amplifier and to the iPod, made no noise!
I don't use my HTC as a player, the sound is not at all good enough!
But the old Nokia 5300 is a nice sounding player, I do use this now and then with Bluetooth IEM's, and the sound is generally acceptable.
It does only accept 2Gb cards though!
Woaw labrat, thanks man :).
Ir really helped me a lot, as i was a little afraid of purchasing a new amp only to encounter the same problem.
Maybe I was just unlucky with my amp of choice, nonetheless I am going to get a new amp and see if I can hear any noise, hopefully not! :D
Back trying to figure out how to stop interference between an iphone and an amp...
This might be too obvious of a solution, but would putting an iphone in a phone case with a backing serve as a thick enough barrier between the phone and the amp to block the interference?
I don't think you can block the signal from just one direction. You could but the entire phone in a pouch that blocks the signal, but then you might as well just turn off GSM on the iPhone itself.
I remember i mentioned this before in this thread, which really isn't a solution in my eyes. Any way, a fellow head-fi'er responded with a simple but viable solution to this.
He suggested that i but the amp in the GSM blocking pouch rather than the iPhone, which might actually work.
His reply is in this thread i believe, and if I remember correctly, he even provided a link to such a pouch.