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| Kenwood KCA-BT200 Bluetooth interface | 
enlarge | Brand: Bluetooth Category: CE
Buy New: $87.45
New (18)
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 19.7 x 19.7 x 19.7
MPN: KCA-BT200 Model: KCA-BT200 UPC: 834120010713 EAN: 0019048178114 ASIN: B0016OMF20
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: WE CAN NOT SHIP TO THE FOLLOWING DESTINATIONS, P.O.B, AK, PR, HI, or MILITARY DESTINATIONS
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| Features:
| | offers wireless connection between select Kenwood car stereos and Bluetooth compatible cell phones | | | supports music streaming | | | send and receive calls with the stereo's controls | | | pass-through port lets you keep your Kenwood CD changer | | | handles up to five different phones |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description offers wireless connection between select Kenwood car stereos and Bluetooth compatible cell phones * supports music streaming * send and receive calls with the stereo's controls * pass-through port lets you keep your Kenwood CD changer * handles up to five different phones *
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| Customer Reviews: Read 1 more reviews...
Good interface But needs work (unstable) July 29, 2008 I have this teamed up with my DNX 5120 also. I had really high hopes for this unit. It is usable, but does not always pair up with my phone, it locks up at times. I have to reboot, or turn unit off then back on. Hope that Kenwood is working on the problems. Sounds like others are have the same issues I am.
Don't bother July 18, 2008 Don't Even bother with this unit if you want to pair it with a blackberry. Despite Kenwood's compatability chart saying it will work it will not stay connected. I spent 2+ weeks talking with Kenwood tech support, and I could not even get them to call me back when they said that they would. In fact I actually got 3 different stories from them. Fortunately, I was able to return this thing and get a different unit that I know will work with my phone.
Excellent performance! July 7, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I installed this in my car last week together with a Kenwood KDC-X492 receiver and a PAC SWI-JACK steering wheel interface, replacing the factory stereo in order to get Bluetooth support.
Before this, I tried out the Parrot MK6000 handsfree unit with music streaming, which once installed would mute the factory stereo whenever you made a call or streamed audio from your cell phone. Although the handsfree functionality was excellent (nearly unreal voice pickup, intuitive controls), there were some quirks with audio streaming from my phone that I found annoying enough that I returned it and got this Kenwood setup instead. Basically, the MK6000 would mute my car stereo for a few seconds at inopportune times (e.g. when an alert was displayed on my phone's screen) - see my review for details.
This Kenwood unit fixes all these issues, and more. Not only that, but it turns out that the Bluetooth technology is actually from Parrot as well - so the handsfree system offers the same outstanding voice pickup as the MK6000 did. I called my own voicemail while driving on a concrete bridge at 70mph - and there was virtually no background noise. I mounted the microphone at the top of the left A-column, right to the left of the sun visor.
Also, with the SWI-JACK adapter, I can use my steering wheel controls to control music streaming from the phone (volume, track), just as I do for audio CDs, tuner, USB media, etc.
The only issue I found (and not quite enough to subtract a star) is that there is no way to invoke your phone's voice command feature. It does come with its own voice recognition feature similar to that of other Parrot handsfree units, where you record a "voice tag" for each contact that you want to call by voice - but unlike the Parrot units themselves, there is no way to bypass this in order to use your phone's voice prompt (which to me would be much preferable). Also, maybe depending on which Kenwood head unit you plug this into, invoking the voice recognition feature involves going 2-3 levels into the menu tree, for a total of 5-10 button presses. In short: I find myself simply dialing with my phone instead - seen as I have it docked in my dash by way of a Brodit/ProClip device holder anyway.
Time to help this rating a bit. May 8, 2008 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
OK.
So I decided to take the plunge and try this device out. I want to say upfront that, in my honest opinion, it's WAY overpriced. However, that did not factor into my scoring. I just want to make sure you see what I'm saying - if it hadn't been for the gift certs I had, I wouldn't have bought it most likely.
Anyway, my deck is a Kenwood KDC-MP735U that I had installed at a shop, for reference. I decided to install the BT interface myself.
Installation was easy. The default cable plugged nicely into the deck, and it picked it right up. Looks like an S-PDIF connector, probably a derivative of USB. It acknowledged the BT200 right away and added the proper menu items. Thinking "that was too easy", I decided to try pairing my personal BlackBerry Pearl (perfect test, as I've seen complaints that BlackBerries don't work well with this). It paired up faster than even my BT headset, totally painless. Again thinking "that was also way too easy", I decided to test it. Turned on the deck and called my personal Pearl (let's call it the 8100) from my work Pearl (call it the 8130). Rang right away, auto answer worked flawlessly, everything worked great. I went ahead and paired the 8130 as well, it also worked like a charm.
So far so good, the device picked up both Pearls without incident. In fact it was so blatantly easy I almost felt like I should be ripping people off charging $75 labor to do this professionally and make a mint. The next test was for the microphone. Here's where it gets interesting - because while the mic does work well, the adhesive is pathetic. I don't expect it to be super glue-sticky, but sticky enough considering that most areas might have been shined with protectant and therefore not keen to any type of adhesives. I managed to get it mounted on the little inlet right in front of the plastic that guards the speedometer and other readouts, and even though it seemed rather unreliable, it stayed in place all the way home (20 minute drive, numerous potholes and speedbumps). Quite impressed there.
I made a call to test how loud I would have to talk. I spoke at regular volume - in fact quieter than I would have talked with the phone to my head - and was audible, loud and clear. It seemed to help cancel some of the road noise nicely. Make sure you keep the windows closed and just use A/C if you need airflow, because the wind noise impacting the edge of the window will cause distortion. Also, keep the phone away from the microphone as you'll get an echo from your voice getting picked up from both sources. I just left the phone in my center console or cup holder and allowed it to ring whenever it needed to.
NOTE: There seems to be some issue with AT&T Wireless (Formerly Cingular) cell phones (outbound). I don't know what the problem is, but any time I was talking to any user on AT&T, they were having trouble hearing me unless I talked loudly. My mother, my boss, and a friend of mine all were having issues, and they're all on Cingular. Yet when I did the test from T-mobile and Sprint, it was loud and clear when I talked at normal volume, so it's got to be carrier specific. If they're using a land line or other carriers, it's fine.
I was able to pair both Pearls to the device simultaneously. This is major cool - so if someone from work calls or someone calls my personal line I would get the call both ways. I didn't get a chance to test that theory, but I assume it should work. I'm curious if it would do a "call waiting" type deal.
To place an outbound call, the deck's remote comes with a number pad and phone buttons that are specifically designed for this. You dial a number just like you would on a phone, the only difference being you have to point the remote at the deck. Normally you'd think this would be difficult, but I found it even easier than dialing on a normal phone. The only tricky part was terminating a call - you have to press the SRC button which returns you to your regularly scheduled program. EDIT: You can also dial directly from the phone, just like you would if you were using a headset. Forgot to mention this as I never bothered doing it.
On screen, my deck comes with icons for the battery power and signal strength indicators of the phone when it's connected. I found these largely useless, as they never matched either phone. On screen it would say that my battery was close to dying, in the red, yet the phone claimed I had half a battery left - in terms of standby time, assuming I left Bluetooth on, I could get a day's worth of juice. That's not "close to dying". Also, the signal strength on screen was never at full, yet the 8130 never went below 4 bars. What was more weird was that it was showing indicators when neither phone was connected. So, again, I just ignored both indicators as useless.
When a call comes in, whatever is playing at the moment is immediately muted (not just lower audio, but completely mute, because it switches to a different source) and the deck will make a ring sound. If you have the auto answer on, the phone will automatically connect and allow you to start talking without pressing a button. Very convenient feature, and quite safe compared to handsfree headsets. I don't use voice dialing, so I can't speak on this, but check some of the other reviews for that. Sorry...
Now, the issues. And the reason I knocked a star off.
First, the unit is WAY too bulky. I just can't understand why it needs to be this bulky considering no other Bluetooth device is. All this thing is doing is sending audio from one device to another - acting as a Bluetooth relay. Even if it's managing the contacts (which in my opinion would be a stupid use of it when it should be part of the deck), the size is just abominable. Kenwood really needs to address its size to a smaller unit that can be glovebox mounted. Additionally, the proprietary connector is a slight turn off. I'd rather see a small USB unit that plugs into the back/front and enables the functionality that way. I know it can be done, computers do it all the time. Plus the iPod connector works on USB and it works well, doing the same thing (making the menus, allowing control and automatic play, etc).
Second, the audio quality is the same as a Bluetooth headset, just through the speakers. This really threw me. I mean, I guess it's to be expected since it's just sending the audio from the phone but...I had higher expectations from the quality. It sounds exactly like a headset just amplified, and that really bugged me. It's not a deal breaker, because it's clear and easy to hear, just bothers me.
UPDATE: Okay, I encountered the BlackBerry Pearl issue. Here's what's strange though: My 8100 works fine with the BT200, always connects automatically when I get in the car like it should, works great. My 8130, however, experiences the connection issue that others have mentioned on web boards - where it says it's paired, but the deck says "Disconnect" - meaning it couldn't make and keep a connection. It simply refuses to connect to the 8130 no matter what I do. I don't know what it is. It might have something to do with the version of Bluetooth, or something carrier specific (my 8100 is T-mobile, my 8130 is Sprint).
UPDATE 2: My deck came with firmware 1.35. It's now up to 2.72. I upgraded the firmware and both phones connected fine, but then after a while the 8130 again freaked out and won't connect. Apparently it's a security issue that has to do with the A2DP; it has to be disabled so that the phone is only connecting voice. Unfortunately neither the deck nor the BlackBerry will allow you to restrict what services are used, so you're stuck.
UPDATE 3: The T-mobile 8120 Pearl has the issue to a lesser degree. It will connect, but you have to do so manually. If you upgrade to the as-yet-officially-unreleased 4.5 OS version, the Bluetooth works as it should...as you can now disable A2DP and useless features on the Pearl, so the connection stays strong and stable, and connects automatically.
Also, another feature I just noticed is supported is Stereo Bluetooth. If your phone supports this profile, you can send music out to the car speakers using the "Ext. Media" source, creating a wireless MP3 experience.
All in all, if you want to have that "rich" feeling that the Lexus, Escalade and Infiniti drivers get every day, and you have a compatible Kenwood deck, you may want to check this bad boy out. Just keep in mind what I mentioned above by way of negatives.
I'm having problems also May 5, 2008 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
I'm having problems similar to those mentioned in M. Martin's review. I'm using this Bluetooth add-on unit with a Kenwood DNX-5120 head unit. I do not know if the problem is with the BT200 unit or with the firmware in the head unit. My guess is that it is the firmware, and there will be an upgrade that fixes the problems. I am guessing this only because the hardware is made by Parrot and so should be of good quality.
In any case, sometimes everything is fine; but sometimes the call does not go through at all (nothing happens, even though the cell signal is strong); sometimes the system just freezes for a while when I try to call; sometimes the call goes through but the device inexplicably hands control back to the cell phone (i.e. I have to talk using the cell phone unless I manually switch it back using a button on the touchscreen). Today the person I called heard only loud hissing on the line. This happened five times in succession, yet when I called using the cell phone there was no problem, so it isn't the cell phone service that's at fault. Later the problem cleared up.
When choosing a number by voice, sometimes it works fine, other times it says "no voice input". Go back to previous screen and try again, now it works fine.
Pairing is unstable also; sometimes it pairs quickly, sometimes it doesn't pair at all. I have found that it helps to have the cell phone on when the head unit is turned on (i.e. when the car is started).
The user interface is poorly designed also. As M. Martin has said, you can select a number using your voice, but you can't actually dial it. To dial you have to look at the screen and touch the dial button! Wacky. Also, if your custom settings are cleared (e.g. by disconnecting the car battery), the power-on default setting is for the phone conversation to come out of the right speakers, rather than the left ones which are closest to the driver. I suspect this is because they just blindly ported the firmware from the Japanese model. In Japan they drive on the left so the driver sits on the right.
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