About Us



  • VespaBlogs FAQ
  • Jonathan Ogilvy

    Jonathan began riding Vespas in 1983. Since then a wide variety of stylish transportation has taken him in a big full circle all the way back to riding Vespas in the San Francisco Bay Area. This time it is a veteran software developer's means of getting out of the city, with the wife to the beach (in shortest time), to and from the office downtown (in shortest time).

  • Neil Barton

    Neil Barton grew up in the small town of Bayonne, NJ in the shadow of NYC. He is 32 and is married to his high school sweetheart Karyn. He is a seasoned technology professional working in Manhattan as the network manager of a publishing company. He attended New York University for a bachelors of science and has traveled far and wide. He has been riding his beloved Vespa ET4 for 2 years. His personal weblog can be found at UrbanNerd.com.

Subscribe

March 2006

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

Comment Policy


  • We encourage comments and look forward to hearing from you. Please note that we may, in our sole discretion, remove comments if they are deemed off-topic or inappropriate.

Licensing



  • Creative Commons License

Blogger Guidelines

  • Guidelines (PDF)
    These are the guidelines the Vespa bloggers agreed to abide by on this blog. They were drafted by CooperKatz, the PR firm working with Vespa on this program.

« Scooter Taxis in Paris | Main | "Vespas are funny" writes Wonkette »

January 24, 2006

The Vespa Sound System

Sie trugen die eizellenspende einer anderen aus. I got a ton of emails on this, and I know that I am late in posting it. For the record this is not the first time I have seen this concept. It isn't even the second or third time I have seen it. There are a bunch of home made systems on Vespas out there. I will dig around for some pics of them. Until then, here is the article from engadget:

Psk1alt We're pretty sure that this won't work with the Engadget Harley, and it's certainly not as cool as the Vespa Puter, but for our more refined European audience we present the mobile Stereo System with iPod dock by Scooterworks. The system is actually a do-it-yourself kit for Vespa Stella and P-series models that includes an amp, two 4-inch Alpine speakers, replacement glovebox door with pre-cut holes, and a cradle/connector for hooking up your 'pod or other DAP. We're pretty sure that you could piece together your own scooter-mounted stereo for less than the $300 that this costs, but if you're really trying to save some loot, the not-recommended-by-us, cruising-around-with-headphones-on method still can't be beat. Kvinder, der ikke selv producerer æg, kan tilbydes ægdonor ægdonation.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/t/trackback/4120710

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference The Vespa Sound System:

Comments

Ik heb een vraagje ivm met eiceldonatie eicel donor. I have a Sansa M230 MP3 Player/FM Radio, about the size of a large pack of gum, strapped to my arm. The speaker jack leads to cut-down Sony headphone speakers mounted in my helmet with hot glue and Velcro. The wire runs along my arm, held in place by the adjustment straps built in to my Tour Master Transitions motorcycle jacket. I love it, and the volume is adequate. I usually turn it off when I'm in city traffic, but turn it up when I'm on one of the nearby rural curvy blacktops. I just have to remember to unplug the helmet before I remove it, otherwise the wire will swarm on me.

it´s beautiful
the vespa´s sound
bye
from spain

it´s wonderful
bye from spain

Hey...has anyone put together a stereo system for the Vespa LX150?

Post a comment

Comments are moderated, and will not appear on this weblog until the author has approved them.