With regard to sending quality audio over Bluetooth - there ARE lossy audio data compression codecs built into various generations of BT, making it most suitable for casual, 'mid-fi' use:Ĭar stereos often have some sort of multiband compression going on to get the music through the noise of the car. *You had mentioned it 'sounded like' 320 kbps mp3 it's worth noting that there's little evidence that many, including trained ears, can, with any kind of consistency, tell properly rendered 320 kbps mp3s from 'the real thing.' But that's probably a discussion for another day, since it's incomprehensible to me why a car PB deck would be going through a conversion to mp3 before sending to DAC. what benefit could that possibly offer?Ĭonsumer electronics designers don't usually put extra effort and processing power into devices just to degrade the sound (unless it saves money and I can't see how putting extra processing necessary to do on-the-fly mp3 compression would save money, rather the opposite). What should you do if you would like to play WAV files on iPhone? Hence, the solution is that you should convert WAV files to iTunes, or you'll need a professional audio converter to finish it.I'm thinking along the same lines the DA will accept a wav file, but is converting it to MP3 for playbackI can't imagine why on earth a car PB device would go to the processing effort of converting a perfectly good CD or better quality down to an mp3 or other lossy format for playback.
There are also some users who use iTunes to upload the WAV file on iPhone due to incorrect operation.
If you save a file that is a non-WAV file originally to a WAV file, the content is a non-WAV file, so it cannot be played on the iPhone.ģ. Your original WAV file is damaged or broken and cannot be played properly on the iPhone.Ģ.
There are some WAV files that may not be played on the iPhone, for the following reasons:ġ. It is a quite common phenomenon that some WAV files cannot be played on iPhone and iOS mobile devices, just like playing WAV on android We all know that WAV is a lossless audio format, but sometimes iPhone and other iOS mobile devices may not play.