This post shows how to pair the Sony XP500 karaoke party speaker with common wireless devices. E.g. These include the iPhone, iPod Touch, and the iPad line of Apple phones, media players, and tablets. A similar routine also works with Android tablets and phones as well.
With your SRS XP 500 powered OFF (power button is dark), run through these directions to pair it to your source BT device. We’re using an iPad Air tablet computer for this demo.
Firstly, press the Home button to reveal the smart device’s Home screen.
We found ours on the second page of the Home screen, as shown next.
Thirdly, touch the Settings app icon.
The smart device then shows the first page of its settings, as shown in the next step.
Our Bluetooth Settings screen displays as follows. Note that our Bluetooth is enabled here. But since our Sony XP500 is currently shut OFF (is not in Bluetooth pairing mode), it does not appear in the Bluetooth devices list. Also, we don’t see it since we’ve never linked this speaker with our mobile device before.
Additionally, turn on the XP500 by quickly pressing and releasing its Power button. See this, pointed at by the blue arrow, in the next shot.
The speaker then powers up, and its status lamp glows green, as we see in the next picture.
But since our iPad does not know about this speaker, the SRS XP500 will not pair with it automatically.
Now, to see your speaker on your device, place it into Bluetooth discovery / pairing mode. To do that, press the Pairing button, and release after a quarter second.
Find the Pairing button as we see in the next picture, pointed at by the green arrow. It’s the second button in from the left on the top button panel, just to the right of the Power button.
Then the speaker emits a rise-fall beep. Also, the Bluetooth Status lamp begins flashing in a pulse-pulse-pause-pulse-pulse-pause pattern.
See the screen shot next. We found our 500, as pointed at by the green arrow.
Tap the listed speaker in the discovered devices list.
Your mobile device then pairs with the SRS XP500.
E.g. The the mobile device’s Bluetooth Settings screen might then change to look something like the following. Note the now-connected SRS-XP500 entry, as pointed at by the green arrows in the next screenshot.
At last, we have now successfully paired this Sony party speaker with a common mobile tablet device.
Here, we show how to update JBL Charge 3 speaker firmware for this popular Bluetooth…
We received the Waterpik NSP-853 Power Spray Plus massaging shower head for Christmas some years…
All smart speakers in the Google Home family now support Bluetooth. They can act as…
Firstly, the original Google Home speaker has a sleep timer that you can set and…
Follow these JBL Flip 4 speaker charging instructions for longest play using the hidden USB…
Here, we list JBL Flip 4 speaker specs specifications. To summarize, these cover the speaker's…