What is this wire for?
What is this wire for?
At one end of the wire is a 3.5 mm Jack plug. On the other end of the wire is presumably a glass LED.
When connected to the phone, nothing happens. The LED does not start to glow.
Also, this wire doesn't work as a microphone. It's also not an earpiece.
What is it for?
It is an infrared receiver extension cord.
Say you have a device that is controlled by an infrared remote, but is tucked away out of line of sight.
You can use this cord to move the infrared receiver into sight.
Here it is on amazon : https://www.amazon.com/uxcell-Infrared-Receiver-Receiving-Distance/dp/B07FKMK3GZ
72 0 ReplyCan't it be used as a replacement for the infrared port (if the phone doesn't have one)?
5 0 ReplyTypically IR transmitter LEDs are transparent or light blueish, to allow as many photons as possible to exit the LED.
Typically IR receiver LEDs are dark, almost black, made to block out visible light and only pass through infrared wavelengths of light.
Here you see an IR transmitter LED on top and an IR receiver LED below that.
17 0 ReplyIt's a receiver, not a blaster
9 1 ReplyNo, since your phone only outputs audio through the headphone jack. These required a PC card that used a jack that's wired up to use this.
5 1 ReplyNo, but you can get something like this to do what you are asking
2 0 ReplyYes but nowadays you'd buy a USB version since few phones have headphone jacks. They're on Amazon.
Here's an old style headphone jack ir blaster adapter:
2 1 Reply
As many have said, that's an IR receiver. That specific model commonly came with Hauppauge TV tuner cards.
37 0 ReplyWow, I hadn’t heard that name in so long. I just remembered my Hauppauge TV tuner I had back in the day. Felt like streaming on a computer does today.
9 0 ReplyYou can still get them and there are still over-the-air broadcast channels. TV without a subscription, plus you can record straight to your PC.
1 0 Reply
An Infrared Receiver sensor? https://www.amazon.de/-/en/Infrared-Receiver-Sensor-Mutant-Linux/dp/B07ZP57P5M
8 0 ReplyIt's part of an IR Blaster setup. That looks like the "blaster", aka the IR LED Transmitter. Most receivers have multiple ones to catch reflections and such
9 4 ReplyIt's a receiver, not a blaster.
The recievers are flat and dark, to make attaching to the device receiving signals easier. Flat for the sticky bit to work, dark to block more of the visible spectrum of light.
6 0 ReplyI also have some that look just like that, and it's the blaster bit because it stickies directly to the face of the device to control buried in a cabinet. The led is shielded and stuck directly next to the other devices receiver.
Suffice it to say, there's no standard. And if the OP doesn't know what it is, they probably don't have the rest of it to make it do anything cool. Last I checked they were about $5 on Amazon for the whole getup, so I'd just e-waste that.
3 0 Reply
Crazy
1 1 ReplySome manufacturers use standard audio connectors to carry just plain power.
They're robust and can carry relatively high current and voltage.
It works, I can see why they get used. After all RCAs are on everything for everything.
I have an e-bike that uses an XLR as a charging port for the battery.
There's an IR led on a cable with a 3.5mm jack somewhere that's an extender for my home cinema system remote.
(That might be what this is, so see if your phone camera can see the IR light from a TV remote and then test it with that thing)
This possible LED plugged into something either home made/bespoke, very old, or Chinese.
Small chance it's from some medical or scientific equipment that hasn't moved with the times.
If it's an LED put a DC voltage down that plug. If it's a light sensor, measure for a DC voltage.
Audio AC signals didn't have an effect so it's probably a DC component.
My bet, point your phone camera at it and put a DC voltage down there in the right direction and you'll see IR light come out.
It might be the receiver. In which case you need to monitor voltage. Then point a TV remote at it.
2 3 Reply