Body Glove technology accessories

*NEW* Body Glove Original OEM BodyGlove Scuba Gamesuit Case for Sony PSP [Original Retail Packaged]!
Body Glove technology accessories are designed for “Goers” who bring their tech gear everywhere they go and won’t settle for anything less than ultimate protection and cutting-edge fashion. The Body Glove Scuba Gamesuit is a shock absorbent and water-resistant case that gives your Sony PSP a Glove-like fit.

Summit Sony PSP Wireless Headset with Free Screen Protector
Free Screen Protector Included
Customer Review: Suicide… well for your money
This thing is horrible not even worth the 20 bucks. You could get 20 quarter pounders from the Mickey D’s manu at Macdonalds and be a whole lot more satified than if you got this piece of trash. I bough it and I can’t even get my favorite radio stations and the headphones look so big and bulky you won’t want to be seen in public while wearing them.
Customer Review: Failed well below already low expectations.
You really do get what you pay for here. The thing I liked most about the Summit Sony PSP Wireless Headset, was the time it took to be delivered, really. The FM Transmitter attaches to the back of the PSP, but it doesn’t feel bulky and it is very light, you literally don’t feel it. That’s about the best feature of the device. To start, the headset is not a headset, they’re headphones. I don’t know if the reviewer(s) below me really DID have it before their review, because they would have noted that the headphones themselves are bulky (which they stated as being otherwise), heavy, very uncomfortable, and the plastic that holds the ear piece to your ear is very soft and bendy. This is a problem, because of the weight of the ear pieces, you always feel like it’s going to fall any minute, and it does fall occasionally. This is not because of the size of your ear, as some of you may think, but because of the soft and bendy plastic that serves to hold the ear-piece to your ear. Both earpieces are held together by a long cable, which in part beats the purpose of being wireless. Although the cable can be hidden below your clothes, it’s very sensitive and will frequently change the PSP sound signal to regular radio signal. Speaking of, the way it works is the FM Transmitter plugs into the headphone jack on the PSP to send the signal to the headphones. One of the earpieces of the headphones has two buttons, SCAN & RESET, and a volume gear. The whole thing requires 4 AAA batteries, which the “Headset” burns through in only a few hours. After turning on the FM Transmitter, you roll the volume gear to turn it on. You press the RESET button first, and then the SCAN button to get the sound signal from the PSP, or at least that’s what it’s supposed to do. Unfortunately the FM Transmitter isn’t very good. Once it transmits the signal to the headphones, there is too much static when listening to FM Radio, and it only gets worse when trying to scan for the signal coming from the PSP. Getting FM Radio is pretty easy, it’s basically there when you turn both devices on. To change from station to station all you do is press the SCAN button. If only it were as easy to get the signal coming from the PSP. It takes roughly about 10-60 minutes to get the signal from the PSP to the headphones, depending on how stubborn the thing is. The instructions (which by the way, it’s all written in ENGRISH, which luckily isn’t that really bad) state that all you have to do is tap the RESET button followed by the SCAN button and presto. It also states that if the signal isn’t very good, to repeat this procedure only holding the RESET button for 1 or 2 seconds. However, you actually have to do this for a good while, while also tapping and playing around with the antenna to get the PSP sound signal. Once you do get it, its static is worse than that of FM Radio (and FM Radio static is pretty bad). The signal is very weak as well, it will not play ALL sounds. Playing around 10 games, I noticed that I could only hear the background music, and that’s it. Sound effects were pretty much non-existent, not because the game didn’t have them but because they just weren’t being sent to the headphones, because the signal was very weak. Even with the volume all the way up. The range of the device is very short. You have to be literally right next to the FM Transmitter’s antenna for it to give you any sound at all. Better you have it in your hands, because moving it resets the signal to that of FM Radio, making you waste another 10-60 minutes trying to get the PSP sound back. Having to be right next to the FM Transmitter to get any sound beats the purpose of owning wireless headphones. You might as well keep your regular headphones. For the low price I didn’t expect it to be HALF decent, but it fell even below my very very VERY low expectations. I would not recommend getting these headphones.
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