Dasaita HA-2186-MAX10 Bluetooth Low Energy - Android Head-Units

I have the above head unit fitted and working fine in my car but I have an engine management device that contains a bluetooth low energy module in it. I would like to connect to this module via the provided app however it appears my head unit does not see or connect to BLE devices.
Does anybody know of a USB type device that I can connect to the head unit which will provide the ability to connect to BLE devices?
I'm using standard Dasaita android 10 and 3.69C.
Thanks

I have a similar issue. I have an Axxess signal processor which you make adjustments to it through Bluetooth. The processor connects to my phone but won't even be seen by my head unit (Dasaita max10). These head units only seem to recognize a phone or (select) obd dongles. It's pretty basic. I have been looking for ways to expand this, but so far unsuccessful.

Related

Compatibility with car head units

I have a pioneer head unit in the car with USB compatibility that works with iPhones, iPods and blackberry's as far as I tested, I just cant get it to work with the tablet as it would initialize MTP and the head unit would display "Device not supported".
I figure since older and newer blackberries work with my head unit, its a software on the device itself that allows that compatibility. I have WiFi access in my car and mounted the tablet for music and GPS navigation. I'd like to use the head unit to control the music while driving and using GPS, but cant seem to find the option anywhere or find applicable software that would make it work.
Any suggestions regarding this?

OBD Hotspot for internet connection?

Has anyone used something like the Delphi Connect or Zubie with their head unit?
I just picked up one of the new Lollipop units from Joying and would rather not connect it with my phone. I am looking at these OBD units vs a USB hotspot. While I would give up bluetooth for OBD, I could run the Delphi or Zubie app on the head unit itself and see the diagnostic codes, etc.
Any experiences or thoughts? Reasons to go with one over the other?
Thanks!
I installed my new head unit today and picked up a Zubie from Best Buy. It is a hotspot that plugs into the OBD port.
It works like a champ too.
My head unit connects via WiFi and I have an always-on connection regardless of my phone being in the car or paired. This saves my phone battery when streaming music and running Waze (which is pretty much the entire time I am in the car).
I haven't even paired my phone to the head unit and am not sure that I will.
I can't run Torque since the OBD port is now in user, but steering wheel controls seem to work fine via CANBUS, so hopefully it won't be a problem.
JaxnTN said:
Has anyone used something like the Delphi Connect or Zubie with their head unit?
I just picked up one of the new Lollipop units from Joying and would rather not connect it with my phone. I am looking at these OBD units vs a USB hotspot. While I would give up bluetooth for OBD, I could run the Delphi or Zubie app on the head unit itself and see the diagnostic codes, etc.
Any experiences or thoughts? Reasons to go with one over the other?
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse

Display 'Torque Pro' directly to head unit without relaying through mobile device

New to forum, as well as new to the Android, Android Auto head units
I am looking for a better understanding of what's needed exactly to display the 'Torque Pro' app directly to a 'Head' unit without passing through a third device
I have the scanner port device
I have the 'Torque Pro' app running on the s9+ mobile device
Goal is to have the app running on a head unit minus the s9+
I have been reading, researching
Down to a Sony Android Auto unit
Or
Joying head unit that uses a sim card?
I am also concerned about quality of music playback, radio and FLAC files
Many thanks for your thoughts
To have OBD directly your only option is an Android based unit like the Joying. Android Auto just mirrors certain apps from your phone.
You'll need an OBD2 dongle. Just install Torque on the head unit and link it with the dongle same as you would with an Android phone.
Sent from my SM-T550 using Tapatalk
Would this obd2 dongle be a USB, Bluetooth or WiFi connection?
I'd still want to be able to connect to phone to the head unit for calls etc. But for the torque Pro to work without the phone.
[email protected] said:
Would this obd2 dongle be a USB, Bluetooth or WiFi connection?
I'd still want to be able to connect to phone to the head unit for calls etc. But for the torque Pro to work without the phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes, Bluetooth connection from head unit to OBD II adapter. You can have multiple Bluetooth connections so your Anroid head unit will be connected to your phone for voice and media and the OBD II adapter for data.

If Bluetooth is capable, why my previous head unit could connect with every device?

So, if in this forum some people say it is not possible to connect any device via Bluetooth except for the phone because it is soldered to the HU or whatever, why my previous head unit with the same wires and android version could do it?
I ordered a boison px6 and test it but I had to return it for some size reasons. I got to make it work with an OBDII and Bluetooth multimedia remote control with NO ISSUES, directly from the Bluetooth settings.
So, now reading the posts in this forum, it seems my new Joyix head unit, which seems to be almost the same unit except for the size, it cannot connect to any device via Bluetooth... how is that possible?
By the way, the seller doesn't agree.
I'm not sure where you got that information, but it is not entirely true. The bluetooth is capable of connecting not only phones, and phone audio but elm327 based obd2 adapters as well. All the units I have had, have this capacity.
Bob_Sanders said:
I'm not sure where you got that information, but it is not entirely true. The bluetooth is capable of connecting not only phones, and phone audio but elm327 based obd2 adapters as well. All the units I have had, have this capacity.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
An example from this forum:
Can a Bluetooth Device (not smartphone, not OBD) works with Android PX5/PX6 device?
I have a Dasaita PX6, with Hal9k ROM and RF210 bluetooth module. I can only pair smartphones and OBD devices. I need to pair a bluetooth lights module to control ambient lights but BT can't recognize it (my phones can do it). I read something...
forum.xda-developers.com
kicooo said:
An example from this forum:
Can a Bluetooth Device (not smartphone, not OBD) works with Android PX5/PX6 device?
I have a Dasaita PX6, with Hal9k ROM and RF210 bluetooth module. I can only pair smartphones and OBD devices. I need to pair a bluetooth lights module to control ambient lights but BT can't recognize it (my phones can do it). I read something...
forum.xda-developers.com
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Well I have bought a separate Bluetooth wifi dongle and I will write here if I got to pair both the OBDII and the Bluetooth multimedia button on the wheel.

Question about OBD connection.

So I bought an aftermarket Android head unit for my car.
I wanted to connect OBD diagnostics apps for vehicle status info, but I had no luck.
I am completely new to this and obviously clueless, but from what gathered online I need an OBD adapter (wireless or bluetooth) to connect the head unit with the cars ECU. That would make sense if the head unit didn't already come with an inbuilt '' Car Info'' app that somehow accurately displays engine rpms, battery voltage, residual oil, mileage, etc.
Is the head unit somehow already connected to the OBD port or am I completely missing something?
The headunit offer you the possibility to read OBD information, but from where ? If nothing read the car information, your radio read nothing.
So, go and spend 10$ for an wifi or bluetooth OBD device, attack it to the car socket, open your BT or WIFI on headunit, do the connection 8PASSWORD 0000 OR 1234) and after that open the app to read the car information.
StefanMne said:
So I bought an aftermarket Android head unit for my car.
I wanted to connect OBD diagnostics apps for vehicle status info, but I had no luck.
I am completely new to this and obviously clueless, but from what gathered online I need an OBD adapter (wireless or bluetooth) to connect the head unit with the cars ECU. That would make sense if the head unit didn't already come with an inbuilt '' Car Info'' app that somehow accurately displays engine rpms, battery voltage, residual oil, mileage, etc.
Is the head unit somehow already connected to the OBD port or am I completely missing something?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If your head unit comes with a can bus box then it will supply a (limited) amount of engine data.
Of which if the many types of head unit do you own and how/what was connected
Minus 10 points for posting a meaningless model number
StefanMne said:
So I bought an aftermarket Android head unit for my car.
I wanted to connect OBD diagnostics apps for vehicle status info, but I had no luck.
I am completely new to this and obviously clueless, but from what gathered online I need an OBD adapter (wireless or bluetooth) to connect the head unit with the cars ECU. That would make sense if the head unit didn't already come with an inbuilt '' Car Info'' app that somehow accurately displays engine rpms, battery voltage, residual oil, mileage, etc.
Is the head unit somehow already connected to the OBD port or am I completely missing something?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi there!
It sounds like you're having some trouble connecting your aftermarket Android head unit to an OBD diagnostics app for vehicle status info. From what you've gathered online, you need an OBD adapter, either wireless or bluetooth, to connect the head unit to the car's ECU.
However, you mentioned that your head unit already has an inbuilt "Car Info" app that accurately displays engine RPMs, battery voltage, residual oil, mileage, etc. This raises the question of whether the head unit is already connected to the OBD port, or if you're missing something.
As someone who has built a Custom Raspberry Pi Car Computer, I can tell you that it's possible for an aftermarket head unit to have an OBD connection built-in, but it's not always the case. It's also possible that the "Car Info" app is displaying information obtained through other means, such as the car's internal sensors or third-party APIs.
If you're still not sure, you could try contacting the manufacturer of your head unit and asking them directly. They may be able to provide more information on how the "Car Info" app is obtaining its data, and whether or not it's connected to the OBD port.
In the meantime, if you're interested in building your own car computer, I came across this helpful guide that you might find useful: https://www.autopi.io/blog/build-a-raspberry-pi-touch-screen-car-computer/. It includes step-by-step instructions on how to build a custom car computer using a Raspberry Pi and a touch screen display. Good luck!

Categories

Resources