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SCION Xb Xa Tc MP3 IPOD
AUX BUTTERFLY
EFFECT
AMP
SCION Xb Xa Tc STEREO
AUXILARY INPUT BOOSTER AMPLIFIER
INCREASE THE VOLUME OF
YOUR MP3 PLAYER IN YOUR SCION
Scion MP3, SANSA, iPod,
NANO, iPhone, WMA, FLAC, PMP, ZUNE, iRiver, BOOSTER BOX
*Currently this is an eBay ONLY item*
Ok, so I have a 2006.5
Scion xB and every time I, or one of my friends, plugs in their MP3
player we all noticed the sound level to be lower than that or the radio
or the CD that was just playing!!! Usually I would just turn the radio
volume up, but sometimes I would have it at max already, …this always
bothered me, …so here we have a solution and an elegant one in my
opinion. And I am pretty sure there are many other cars with this same
problem and this is a nice, cheap, super easy, working & tested
solution!

This little box, just
slightly larger than a quarter, uses no batteries and yet will put out
five times the audio voltage level from any portable audio player
headphone output and it will never distort the signal’s output. For
anyone who is into electronics and it’s theories, this is how it works:
first you have to understand that a headphone output in particular is
made for low impedance headphones, not a high impedance auxiliary input
on a car stereo, or any input on any amplifier for that matter, so what
this device does is through a specially designed windings interface via
magnetic coupling facilitated with an iron core the unit takes the
“current” drive and turns it into “voltage” drive, matching the
impedance for the input on the car stereo effectively and without using
any additional external or internal power (batteries).
The end result: any device
with a headphone output is louder!:

To set this device up, first turn
on you car stereo and either play a CD or tune in you favorite
radio station and set the volume level you plan on listening at.
Then simply plug your MP3 player (could be anything with a
headphone output for that matter) into the right jack on the MP3
BEA box with the supplied cord. Next, connect the left jack of
the box to the auxiliary input on your car stereo. Start with
the volume on the MP3 player at a very low setting, and slowly
raise the volume on the MP3 player until it is as loud as the CD
or radio you used to set the volume level in the first step. Now
at this point you can adjust the volume from now on as you would
normally – from the radio’s volume, …please note that
overdriving (by having the volume all the way up on the MP3
player) the car stereo may result in distorted sound and/or
could damage the car stereo, use this device at your own risk.
Me and my friends have been using this for over a year now and
it is awesome and really gets the music going good!!! =P

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Butterfly Effect:
(Some interesting reading if you have the time)
The butterfly effect is a phrase that encapsulates the more
technical notion of sensitive dependence on initial
conditions in chaos theory. Small variations of the initial
condition of a dynamical system may produce large variations
in the long term behavior of the system. So this is
sometimes presented as esoteric behavior, but can be
exhibited by very simple systems: for example, a ball placed
at the crest of a hill might roll into any of several
valleys depending on slight differences in initial position.
Theory:
The phrase refers to the idea that a butterfly's wings might
create tiny changes in the atmosphere that may ultimately
alter the path of a tornado or delay, accelerate or even
prevent the occurrence of a tornado in a certain location.
The flapping wing represents a small change in the initial
condition of the system, which causes a chain of events
leading to large-scale alterations of events. Had the
butterfly not flapped its wings, the trajectory of the
system might have been vastly different. Of course the
butterfly cannot literally cause a tornado. The kinetic
energy in a tornado is enormously larger than the energy in
the turbulence of a butterfly. The kinetic energy of a
tornado is ultimately provided by the sun and the butterfly
can only influence certain details of weather events in a
chaotic manner.
Recurrence, the approximate return of a system towards its initial
conditions, together with sensitive dependence on initial
conditions are the two main ingredients for chaotic motion.
They have the practical consequence of making complex
systems, such as the weather, difficult to predict past a
certain time range (approximately a week in the case of
weather).
Origin of the concept and the term
The term "butterfly effect" itself is related to the work of
Edward Lorenz,and is based in Chaos Theory and sensitive
dependence on initial conditions, first described in the
literature by Jacques Hadamard in 1890[1] and popularized by
Pierre Duhem's 1906 book. The idea that one butterfly could
have a far-reaching ripple effect on subsequent events seems
first to have appeared in a 1952 short story by Ray Bradbury
about time travel ( see Literature and print here) although
Lorenz made the term popular. In 1961, Lorenz was using a
numerical computer model to rerun a weather prediction,
when, as a shortcut on a number in the sequence, he entered
the decimal .506 instead of entering the full .506127 the
computer would hold. The result was a completely different
weather scenario.[2] Lorenz published his findings in a 1963
paper for the New York Academy of Sciences noting that "One
meteorologist remarked that if the theory were correct, one
flap of a seagull's wings could change the course of weather
forever." Later speeches and papers by Lorenz used the more
poetic butterfly. According to Lorenz, upon failing to
provide a title for a talk he was to present at the 139th
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of
Science in 1972, Philip Merilees concocted Does the flap of
a butterfly’s wings in Brazil set off a tornado in Texas as
a title.
Although a butterfly flapping its wings has remained constant in
the expression of this concept, the location of the
butterfly, the consequences, and the location of the
consequences have varied widely.
Appearances in popular culture
Main article: Butterfly effect in popular culture
The term is sometimes used in popular media dealing with the
idea of time travel, usually inaccurately. Most time travel
depictions simply fail to address butterfly effects.
According to the actual theory, if history could be
"changed" at all (so that one is not invoking something like
the Novikov self-consistency principle which would ensure a
fixed self-consistent timeline), the mere presence of the
time travelers in the past would be enough to change
short-term events (such as the weather) and would also have
an unpredictable impact on the distant future. Therefore, no
one who travels into the past could ever return to the same
version of reality he or she had come from and could have
therefore not been able to travel back in time in the first
place, which would create a phenomenon known as a time
paradox.
Disclosure
Statement:
*Not responsible
for any effects
which may be
undesirable from
the installation
of any kits, or
customization
accessories sold
by
SpeedZoneAhead.
User discretion
is advised and
SpeedZoneAhead
will not be
liable for your
misuse or any
other crap. SOLD AS IS and NON-RETURNABLE. Use
at your own
risk, don't be
stupid and don't
play in traffic.
All item
sold/advertised
by
SpeedZoneAhead
are designed to
the best of our
ability and are
real-world
tested and our
results are
printed in the
advertisement/sales-page/auction.
Don't drink and
drive, live to
ride, ride to
live. Stop
reading this and
go riding
already - Your friends @ SpeedZoneAhead. |