kwill Posted March 24, 2023 Share Posted March 24, 2023 (edited) Does anyone know if it is possible to connect the px-s1000 to a bluetooth box and play the sound additionally on this box? My Goal is to stream the sound to another room so people in that room could listen to me play? Edited March 24, 2023 by kwill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Brad Saucier Posted March 24, 2023 Share Posted March 24, 2023 Bluetooth audio is only a receiver on these keyboards, not a transmitter. Monitoring a musical instrument with Bluetooth audio is not recommended, since the latency (delay) inherent to Bluetooth audio is very noticable by the player. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Solution Jokeyman123 Posted March 25, 2023 Solution Share Posted March 25, 2023 What I use is the Takstar WMP-200 wireless (not bluetooth) transmitter/receiver system, looks like only around 30-40 US dollars for the system. The transmitter uses a frequency range in the high 700MHz range-not the same frequency as bluetooth-same as some wireless mikes and headsets-which also do not have any audio lag. The Takstar is the same technology. the transmitter also needs a "wall-wart" power supply which comes with it although I use a portable cellphone 12V power pack. The receiver runs off 2 AA batteries, has switchable frequency channels. NO AUDIO LAG. A little more complicated to set up-the transmitter has 1 1/4" stereo jack-you'd have to use the right audio adapter cable from your Casio to the Takstar-I use the keyboard stereo headphone jack out to the Takstar. Might have to adjust the volume on the Casio a bit. The Takstar receiver has a mini stereo headphone output jack 1/8"-I use this system to plug in my best headsets-so becomes a wireless headphone setup-works all over the house, not sure what the range is but it easily beats bluetooth. It has a volume control and channel switch right inside the panel door. NO LAG! In your situation-instead of plugging headphones into the receiver's output jack, with the right audio cable-easy-its a 1/8" stereo plug out to a 2-connector RCA directly to a stereo amp input or PA head with 1/4" plugs on the end instead of RCA-or with a different audio cable you could adapt this receiver to input to something else. I've had it working into my stereo line inputs into a Zoom multi-track digital recorder which uses two 1/4" monophonic jacks-or with a different audio adapter-right into a guitar amp which won't sound terribly good but will work. OR...one of the cheap and cheerful newer little Chinese stereo amps that use RCA stereo inputs which I connect to a pair of (not Bluetooth but wired) bookshelf speakers. You will need to amplify that stereo headphone output though, but it is wireless stereo. Yes you will need to become better acquainted with the joys of stereo and mono adapters and adapter cables-but once you get this setup-just about anything that has an audio out will go into the Takstar transmitter (I use it for wireless TV audio even though I have bluetooth sets-bluetooth only goes out a few feet, i can walk outside and still be hearing whatever is connected to the other end with the Takstar. So for me at least-far superior to messing with bluetooth/syncing/dropped signals etc. It has its uses but for live lag-free sound/music and a stronger signal, I like this Takstar setup. There may be similar non-bluetooth systems like this, but this is one of the simplest I've found, and IT WORKS! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.