I have a 2013 Spyder RT S. Is there an audio cable available aftermarket to fit the plug in the trunk. I want to get a blue tooth adapter so I can play music through my speakers on the bike. It’s an option from Can Am but I think it is about $80.
Printable View
I have a 2013 Spyder RT S. Is there an audio cable available aftermarket to fit the plug in the trunk. I want to get a blue tooth adapter so I can play music through my speakers on the bike. It’s an option from Can Am but I think it is about $80.
https://www.compacc.com/oemcatalogs/...o-player-input
They also have it for iPhone.
If you buy the BT adapter from Motorcycle Dave also a sponsor here you will get the cable included. But that wire ONLY connects the BT to the entertainment center and BTs it up to your helmet. The 7 pin wire you are looking for ONLY takes the music from your Ipod or mp3 player(depending on wire) to the entertainment center. You will still need the Bluetooth adapter and its attendant wires to take the music to your helmet.Wire takes the music from the module to the bluetooth adapter to bluetooth helmet headset. If you only care about the speakers then all you need is the Ipod or mp3 player wire, and they should have come with your RT
Also you do not need any bluetooth adapter just to go to the speakers.You only need that to go to a bluetooth headset.
I found the cable needed on eBay for 22.46, 7 pin plug on one end and a 3.5 mm plug on the other. it will plug into the bike and then I can plug the Bluetooth adapter in. thank everybody for your help
Note: There are 2 cables available for the RTS.
1) The 3.5mm plug is for Android or basic MP3 players. Downside is you do not get full control of the player. You can only advance back or forward a song with the handlebar controls.
2) The iPhone/iPod 36 pin plug. This is for Apple only. Apple products have an advanced control protocol no others have. It allows full control of the device. Playlists, artist, title, etc etc...
If you want full capability which is real nice, I recommend getting an older Apple iPod like the iPod touch 4th gen and leave it dedicated in the trunk. You can get a 4th gen 32GB for less than $50 if you shop around on Ebay.
This video shows you the capabilities of having an iPod.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eqf6LOVsS2k
Bob
Some other info on the iPod cables for different years along with some tips!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YB3c9IfhByU
Bob
OK so I am not understanding something here. In order to put your phone music thru to the speakers you only need the 7 pin wire,no Bluetooth involved. As Finless stated the ipod #4 dedicated to your spyder is your best bet and relatively cheap off ebay. But again,if you are going thru the speakers you don't need Bluetooth only the 7 pin wire wire either the 3.5 pin on the other end or the 30 pin ipod plug.
What he wants to do is what I do. I have an Android phone mounted up front where I can reach it that I play Pandora on occasionally. I also have a BT receiver that connects into the plug in the trunk. I play Pandora on the phone connected by BT to the BT receiver in the trunk, which then of course plays through the bike audio system. In my case I use a wired headset, not BT headset. I also use a BT receiver to feed the audio from my tablet, which I use as a GPS, into the GPS audio input of the bike radio. I'll admit that sometimes BT works better than wired. The wire plug into my tablet was going wonky from vibration so transmitting from my tablet to a BT receiver alleviates plug connection problems.
BT adapters come in three flavors, receive only, transmit only, and receive/transmit.