Kayaker said:
Sandman said:
... Maybe Garrett only wants us to use their phones.
I got the Garrett adapter and have used it with iPod earphones, iPhone earphones with/mic, cheap headphones I got with my Bounty Hunter IV (for "free" from Kellyco... ha), and with a wireless Auvio setup I'm working on now. All of them work fine for me.
Chuck, I humbly stand corrected! Although my WIRED headphones all work fine, the Auvio wireless transmitter/headphone does the same thing your headphones do. At first I though it might be some mechanical/switch issue, like maybe the plug wasn't hitting the bottom of the jack, but that doesn't seem to be the case. Even if I use a headphone extension cord and plug the wireless transmitter into THAT, rather than directly into the Garrett adapter... it still doesn't cut off the internal speaker.
My GUESS is that the detector knows when to switch the speaker off by sensing the low impedance of the headphones when they're plugged in. Maybe my wireless setup (or YOUR headphones) have an impedance significantly different (higher) than that of most standard headphones(?).
I suppose I'll send an e-mail to Garrett Customer Support, but I not very hopeful that they'll care enough about my particular issue/question to help with it. If it IS an impedence issue, I don't know of a way to resolve it.
Edit - I did a bit more poking around on the web and think I'll try adding a resistor across the headphone ring and tip connections. This will be in parallel to the headphone impedance and will bring down the impedance that the detector "sees" when the headphone is plugged in. I'll try to get to Radio Shack tomorrow at lunch and pick up a few resistors. Based on what I'm reading (and guessing at the headphone impedance), I've got an idea of what value might work. It might lower the headphone volume though, but I don't know how much, if at all. If I find something that works for my setup, I'll post here.... not sure if anybody is interested.
Disclaimer - I don't claim to be an electronics engineer but was an electronics technician in a previous career over 20 years ago... so I'm fumbling my way through this.