No. You can only use 3.5mm plugs on an iPod. There are adapters however, that change your plug from 6.4mm to 3.5mm.
An iPod can be connected to a stereo system for the purpose of playing music stored on the iPod with the quality of a stereo system. An iPod can be connected to a stereo either through a dock, or with the headphone jack on the iPod connected to the Aux In port of the stereo.
3.5mm jack, look in the back o fit maybe an AUX printed above a small hole
You cannot connect an iPod to itself because your iPod only has one jack that would be useful for anything of the sort. You need to purchase an iPod interface adapter to connect your portable device to the car stereo
If you have all your music on a portable MP3 player, such as an Apple iPod, there's an easy way to listen to it through the big speakers on your home-stereo system. You can choose between three options: connecting using the headphone jack, an iPod dock, or a wireless FM transmitter.Connecting the iPod via headphone jackAll you need is a simple Y cable, which is available from any home-electronics store. Connect the small plug to the headphone output of your iPod--or any portable audio player. Then connect the red and white RCA-style plugs to the matching inputs on the back of your stereo receiver or boombox.Connecting the iPod via iPod dockTo connect using the iPod dock, you first need to purchase an iPod dock accessory. Using the same type of Y cable, connect the small plug to the matching jack on the rear of the iPod dock. Then, plug the red and white RCA-style plugs to the matching inputs on the back of your stereo receiver or boombox. This method provides a line-level connection that maintains a volume level to your stereo system and allows the iPod to recharge.Connecting the iPod via wireless FM transmitterYou can also connect your iPod to your stereo wirelessly. You'll need to purchase a compatible wireless FM transmitter--there are several available--and connect it your iPod. Once your transmitter is connected, simply tune any nearby radio to the correct frequency, and you'll be listening to your own iPod-powered mini radio station.
If you have the factory installed Monsoon stero, you cannot. Must must but a new stereo that has an audio jack.
Yes, iPod headphones will work with an iPad.
Any car stereo is iPod ready. The issue with most late model cars is that there is no input jack for your iPod. However, an input can be purchased at any electronics store and can be installed on nearly any car.
Try flipping out the piece to your stereo system (where the CD drive is). There may be a "jack" in there, but you have to buy a seprate cord which plugs from your IPOD into this jack. It is not a docking station, it may look small enough for your headphones to plug into. If this feature is not there, Wal Mart has a reliable little gadget that lets you play your IPOD through the charger outlet/cigarette lighter in your car.
The iPad has a standard 3.5-mm stereo headphone jack and will work with most brands of earphones.
Yes, you can charge an iPod Touch from an outlet at your house. You must first go to the Apple Store (or their website). Then, find a wall outlet-to-iPod Touch connection slot made specifically by Apple for your iPod Touch. Then, buy it (which is usually around $29.99, excluding tax and price rises or drops), and it should work.
There's nothing wrong with that, the contacts are designed to line up no matter if it's mono, stereo, or stereo with a mic (or mono with a mic!).
Solution 1. The easiest fix is an adaptor with a cassette to 3.5 mm jack. You can get these from Tesco and Halford. They cost about £10 and plug into the headphones socket in the iPod and slides into the cassette deck on the car stereo. Solution 2. The alternative is the iPod FM transmitter. These plug into the iPod and transmit what ever is playing on a lower power FM frequency that you can tune in any FM radio to receive. These can be priced from £10 - £30 - you can get these on eBay - either apple branded or generic. Quality is variable