Just resurrecting this thread with a question about the Bovee Tune2Air adapter.AnubisZed said:No not all, only those that have the Enhanced Bluetooth.
It can be retrofitted but it's not cheap as you'll need a new MULF unit and find someone that has the proper coding kit for the MULF unit (normal coding doesn't work on this unit).
A much cheaper alternative would be the Tune2Air Bluetooth receiver, it basically turns your phone into an iPod but without connecting it directly via a lead. If you have an iPhone then you'll have track titles and artist info on the iDrive screen, alas though if you have an Android then you won't receive this display. It is good though as it gives you control via the steering wheel buttons and at only £100 is much cheaper and easier to fit than a retrofitted MULF.
Or, you could go all the way and fit an Android touchscreen for loads of features above standard (works with both iDrive and non-iDrive cars), for more info click the link in my signature below![]()
enzed4 said:Just resurrecting this thread with a question about the Bovee Tune2Air adapter.
I'm not sure how this would work in my car. I have a USB socket in the glove box, which I've used to transfer music from a usb stick to the car's hard drive, and under the arm rest I have a 12V socket and a 3.5mm aux input. Looking at the Tune2Air adapter, it appears that it needs to plug into a USB and 3.5mm socket, but I don't have these together anywhere. Does this mean I don't have the 'ipod' feature in my car, so this adapter won't work? I will see if I can dig up any userguides/instructions/videos for the tune2air which might answer the question but thought I'd ask here as well.
Edit: looking at my car's features/options, I can't see anything that mentions ipod integration. If I don't have this option I guess the Tune2Air is no use?
This is exactly what I thought. Thanks Dave.AnubisZed said:The Tune2Air will NOT work without the combined AUX/USB socket. The AUX is for the sound and the USB is for power and the control side of it. It has to be the combined socket and coded accordingly.
Any other bluetooth adaptor will work but you wont have control of it via the stereo or steering wheel buttons.
This also requires a USB in the centre storage tray/cup holder? Not the glove box USB? I think without the centre console aux/USB option I'm pretty limited for anything more than just music on the hard drivescootr said:In case anyone is interested in the flash drive method. I put hours of music on a small flash drive. The iDrive recognizes this as auxiliary and steering wheel controls volume, pause, next. Phone works as usual interrupting the music. Took a 2.5 hour drive and never heard the same song twice or one I didn't like
Zed Baron said:don't know if its already been mentioned.... if you have idrive then you have a hard-drive built in, which you can load all your music on, you can either copy onto it via usb in the glovebox or if you have a cd in you can copy that to the hard-drive.
Upload the iphone music to a PC and then load on a flashdrive. This should be pretty straight forward. Easier if you have itunes on the PC you can make playlists and then send them to a flash drive. In my case I wanted all my songs so I just selected a bunch of songs ( 10 or 12 at a wack) and dragged them to the flash drive and repeat until they were all copied over.Silverstar said:Does anyone know how to get music from an iPhone or iTunes onto a flash drive?