Beware iPhone OS 4 Upgrade




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This on '07 GL.
Last edited by lkchris; Jun 30, 2010 at 01:23 PM.
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Last edited by jeffreyy; Jun 30, 2010 at 05:24 AM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
I just used a MB interface from NAVTV (Tooki) and had the Parrot software update and everything seems fine (06 CLS55)

I just used a MB interface from NAVTV (Tooki) and had the Parrot software update and everything seems fine (06 CLS55)
I'm afraid the issue is that the BT standard is not accurate enough and leaves interoperability issues that need to be ironed out with experience. This is something where MB (Peiker, not sure if it was better with Motorola in the US, they seemed to optimise their implementation for their phones mainly) and Apple need to learn (I'm sure both will gradually).
anyways technology advanced with apples new operating system, which obviously is the measuring stick for all phones... same as the new windows 7, over vista.... some things have a harder time being backwards compatible
how many people had droid problems pairing when it came out... quite a few...
hell look at some of the topics in this section about blackberry's htc's etc....
the MB system that was used prior to the new C class was a band aid... plain and simple... and falls in the same category as the ipod band-aid
OS4 gets 2 thumbs up
My 2.0 dongle pairs with and functions well with iPhones up to the 3GS up to (but not including) iOS4. I haven't tried one with iOS4, nor have I (yet) tried an iPhone 4.
However, I tend to think the problems arise from the ISP's implementation of the BT core and HFP profiles - perhaps to some extent, the phone manufacturers, and even to a lesser extent, the auto manufacturers. The fundamental problem is, there is no absolute standard for anyone; there is a multiplicity of Bluetooth standards and profiles, and guessing which mix a given phone manufacturer, ISP, or auto manufacturer will use at any one time in nigh impossible.
For example, my wife has a Peiker BT unit running the BT 1.0 core profile (I don't know the HFP) in her Lincoln Town car. She recently tried to upgrade to a Verizon Droid Incredible. No go. The phone would pair, but voice transmission and reception were so badly overmodulated that conversations were completely unintelligible on both ends. We didn't even get to the point of checking phone book downloads.
Yet, when she tried the RIM Blackberry Storm II, also from Verizon, it worked perfectly in all respects. That's what she bought to replace her 5 year old phone.
Plainly, one new phone's BT implementation was written to be backward compatible; the other was not.
I suspect that the iOS4 phone book download problem will be solved, likely by Apple, shortly. It doesn't seem to be universal, but does occur in some MB systems using BT 2.0. That, or some bright person will come up with a workaround. Apple has addressed such problems in the past.
I hope so; it's a lot less expensive than replacing the entire phone system. If that were to become necessary, I'd continue to use the plug-in/Bluetooth V710 I currently use. It works fine in the plug-in mode and with the 5878 dongle (when I choose to use it, which is rare) in the S500, and with the new Alpine BT setup in my 450SL. An iPhone would have to work with both cars as well, before I'd buy it.
Last edited by Skylaw; Jul 5, 2010 at 02:23 PM.

anyways technology advanced with apples new operating system, which obviously is the measuring stick for all phones... same as the new windows 7, over vista.... some things have a harder time being backwards compatible
how many people had droid problems pairing when it came out... quite a few...
hell look at some of the topics in this section about blackberry's htc's etc....
the MB system that was used prior to the new C class was a band aid... plain and simple... and falls in the same category as the ipod band-aid
OS4 gets 2 thumbs up
I do not disagree with many of your statements but I find it odd that you say Apple "is allowed" to introduce issues because some droid had issues with their first release(s)? And you feel a giant step forward with BT technology such as that from OS4 justifies backwards compatibility issues. Most of the car industry (not only MB) should have to swap head units because of this sudden leap in technology.Personally I feel it is just a bug that happens when the manufacturer is new in the playground but I believe they will learn and fix it soon.
Opinions from other people who are equally wrong as myself:
http://discussions.apple.com/thread....art=0&tstart=0
I am just stating the benz stuff for that model year is old by any standards and is band-aided together with fixes.
skylaw, if you got the new bt add on device from alpine kce400bt that parrot will have a software upgrade for it. the nice thing about parrot is they are on top of it
Unlike folks who bought the new iPhone 4 already, I'm in no hurry. I will likely wait for the much-rumored Verizon CDMA version (I usually disregard the oft-repeated, always-wrong-so-far rumors - but these are coming from mainstream sources such as WSJ). CDMA and the new LTE 4th Gen network have an inherently greater bandwidth capability than the AT&T 3G or 4G networks, and all new smartphones, including the iPhone, are bandwidth hogs.
Thanks again for your recommendation on the Hertz Hi-Energy speakers for the SL; they're great. Not as expensive as Focal and others, but much better than the Alpine Type Rs that were in the car before.
For other members, I wanted some good 3-way 6x9's for the back of my '78 450 SL. It's a convertible, and I almost never use the hard top. As a result it's noisy, very noisy - and I didn't think sinking big bucks into a super audio system for that car was wise. Jbondox made a great recommendation on speakers.
Last edited by Skylaw; Jul 7, 2010 at 05:13 PM.
also, on my iphone it is a 3g jailbroke phone. my carrier is simple mobile and it costs $60/month for unlimited text, phone, and data...
I only noticed once when i was in the middle of nowhere that i had loss of service with it...
I love the iphone, tried the droid and blackberry, but love the iphone...
oh well hope the issues gets resolved i am out of here... gotta go to work...
So, I called Apple tech support to try to get a compatibility chart - didn't get it. However, the tech I spoke to said specifically that the Mercedes owners he has spoken to about failure to download in each case simply needed to re-pair the phone after the iOS4 upgrade. He said he specifically gave one owner instructions to set a pairing code of "0000" and it got his phone book downloaded. Odd, because the pairing code for my BT puck is "MBUSA" (62872). For whatever that is worth, I pass it on. We'll be interested in responses from forum members.
I also asked about a "face calling" issue that I saw written about over the weekend. According to some iPhone 4 blogs, when holding the iPhone 4 close to the face, calls may be terminated, and another call placed when not intended by the user. One blogger reported that he was puzzled when he had been talking to his wife when suddenly there was a brief silence followed by a former girlfriend (still in his phone book) coming on the line. His original call had been dropped, and a call made to a "random" entry in his phone book while the screen touched his face. Another reported he had been talking to a friend about a referee he described in some pretty foul language, when suddenly a voice on the line said "(name), you may not be talking to who you think you are." The call had switched from his friend to his boss. Not what you want to happen. This is entirely different from the frequently reported antenna problem.
According to Apple tech support, "face calling" is caused by one of two things. There is a proximity sensor located next to one of the speakers on the front of the phone. When it senses one's cheek (or whatever) close by, it freezes the screen controls to avoid inadvertent disconnects and calls. When there is a problem with this sensor, all kinds of odd events can be triggered by the "live" screen. One cause of the problem is a software "glitch" that is cured by connecting to iTunes, and restoring the phone's firmware. This is not a defect in iOS4; it would be something becoming corrupted along the way. The other cause of the problem is a defective proximity sensor; in that case, Apple will replace the phone.
Regarding the antenna problem, of course Apple has come up with its "bumper" case solution. Frankly, you can solve the problem by covering the gap between the antennas with a 1" long piece of electrical tape, if you don't want the additional bulk of the bumper.
Last edited by Skylaw; Jul 19, 2010 at 04:33 PM.
I think the biggest issue with my phone is that I have a tendency to hit the mute button with my ear or cheek, resulting in hello hello hello from the other party then click...
hey i got big ears
With the '05 S500 (MHI phone system and Bluetooth puck B6 787 5878): Pairing was perfect, and a 350+ entry phone book downloaded fine. Phone book scrolling and paging was fully functional. Here was the surprise: Multiple phone number entries under one name showed as separate entries labeled home, work, etc! The name was repeated for each entry, then the number and type of entry. That's far better than I have seen with many Bluetooth setups in my MB. Voice quality was excellent on both ends.
Unfortunately, I neglected to try out the A2DP function (stereo music over Bluetooth). However, I did plug the phone into my Dension Gateway 500 iPod adapter, and it worked as both a music player and as a phone; incoming calls paused music, and music resumed when the call ended. Same for outgoing calls. The iPhone responded to steering wheel controls and COMAND controls when plugged in. I would anticipate the same with an MB iPod kit, but don't have one to try out.
There were a number of additional menu choices when paired with the S-Class - contacts, dialed calls, missed calls and so forth. I did not have time to check these out fully, but it was good to see the choices available.
PLEASE NOTE: I have not tried the iPhone 4 out with the V60 puck, with the first series of MHI puck (B6 787 5839), or with built-in Bluetooth systems that started appearing in some '09 and later models. However, puck B6 787 6131 is electronically the same as 5878, and uses the same Bluetooth firmware. It should work as described above.
Also: Some of the problems reported with iOS4 breaking phone book downloads seem to be from owners of previous generation iPhones (3GS and earlier) that have upgraded to iOS4. Those phones use a different chipset than the iPhone 4. I don't have further information, except for the recommendation to completely re-pair the phone to get a phone book download. We'll be very interested to hear from you to see if that works.
With the '78 450SL (Alpine head unit with an external Parrot-manufactured Alpine KCE-400BT Bluetooth/iPod integration unit): Again, pairing and phone book download were perfect. Phone book scrolling worked just fine. This time I did try A2DP, and it worked well. Unfortunately, control of the iPhone is not possible from the head unit with the current iPhone A2DP implementation; you must use the iPhone controls. It is an iPhone limitation, not an MB equipment limitation, and OS updates may provide the function in the future.
However, when I plugged the iPhone into the iPod connector for the Alpine, sound quality was immediately better than with A2DP; and the iPhone could be controlled from the head unit. As with the S-Class, when connected to the iPod connector, incoming and outgoing calls would pause the music, then resume it when the call was completed.
The additional menu selections under the phone book were not present with the KCE400BT unit.
I could not fully check voice quality over the Alpine unit because of a microphone malfunction in my 450SL; I verified that it was occurring with my car's setup because the exact problem occurred with the phone I have been using (successfully) with that system. I must check my mic connections. However, call quality was excellent between 2 phones (not over Bluetooth).
Anyway, I have ordered the iPhone 4, but must wait a while like everyone else. Will write more once it comes in.
Last edited by Skylaw; Jul 21, 2010 at 08:52 PM.
With the '05 S500 (MHI phone system and Bluetooth puck B6 787 5878): Pairing was perfect, and a 350+ entry phone book downloaded fine. Phone book scrolling and paging was fully functional. Here was the surprise: Multiple phone number entries under one name showed as separate entries labeled home, work, etc! The name was repeated for each entry, then the number and type of entry. That's far better than I have seen with many Bluetooth setups in my MB. Voice quality was excellent on both ends.
Unfortunately, I neglected to try out the A2DP function (stereo music over Bluetooth). However, I did plug the phone into my Dension Gateway 500 iPod adapter, and it worked as both a music player and as a phone; incoming calls paused music, and music resumed when the call ended. Same for outgoing calls. The iPhone responded to steering wheel controls and COMAND controls when plugged in. I would anticipate the same with an MB iPod kit, but don't have one to try out.
There were a number of additional menu choices when paired with the S-Class - contacts, dialed calls, missed calls and so forth. I did not have time to check these out fully, but it was good to see the choices available.
PLEASE NOTE: I have not tried the iPhone 4 out with the V60 puck, with the first series of MHI puck (B6 787 5839), or with built-in Bluetooth systems that started appearing in some '09 and later models. However, puck B6 787 6131 is electronically the same as 5878, and uses the same Bluetooth firmware. It should work as described above.
Also: Some of the problems reported with iOS4 breaking phone book downloads seem to be from owners of previous generation iPhones (3GS and earlier) that have upgraded to iOS4. Those phones use a different chipset than the iPhone 4. I don't have further information, except for the recommendation to completely re-pair the phone to get a phone book download. We'll be very interested to hear from you to see if that works.
With the '78 450SL (Alpine head unit with an external Parrot-manufactured Alpine KCE-400BT Bluetooth/iPod integration unit): Again, pairing and phone book download were perfect. Phone book scrolling worked just fine. This time I did try A2DP, and it worked well. Unfortunately, control of the iPhone is not possible from the head unit with the current A2DP implementation; you must use the iPhone controls.
However, when I plugged the iPhone into the iPod connector for the Alpine, sound quality was immediately better than with A2DP; and the iPhone could be controlled from the head unit. As with the S-Class, when connected to the iPod connector, incoming and outgoing calls would pause the music, then resume it when the call was completed.
The additional menu selections under the phone book were not present with the KCE400BT unit.
I could not fully check voice quality over the Alpine unit because of a microphone malfunction in my 450SL; I verified that it was occurring with my car's setup because the exact problem occurred with the phone I have been using (successfully) with that system. I must check my mic connections. However, call quality was excellent between 2 phones (not over Bluetooth).
Anyway, I have ordered the iPhone 4, but must wait a while like everyone else. Will write more once it comes in.



