Beyond Bluetooth: The Audiophile’s Guide to Wired Sound Therapy
- avigail berg-panitz
- 20 hours ago
- 3 min read
Beyond Bluetooth: The Audiophile’s Guide to Wired Sound Therapy
If you’ve purchased our recliner, or mat you’re likely looking forward to some deep relaxation. But as you set up your tablet to stream those soothing frequencies, a common dilemma arises: Do I really want to flood my body with Bluetooth radiation while trying to heal? And what if I want to feel the heavy bass vibrations without blasting music into the rest of the house?
While Bluetooth is convenient, it isn’t always the best choice for holistic wellness or late-night privacy. Fortunately, you can easily bypass wireless signals entirely.
Here is how to set up a completely wired, high-fidelity system that delivers deep physical vibrations straight to your mats and recliners, and private audio directly to your ears.
Step 1: Connecting Your Tablet to the Amplifier (The Wired Way)
Most modern tablets have ditched the traditional 3.5mm headphone jack, but creating a wired bridge to your amplifier is still incredibly simple using a USB Dongle or External DAC (Digital-to-Analog Converter).
For iPads/Tablets with USB-C:
You will need a USB-C to RCA cable or a USB-C to 3.5mm Aux adapter.
Plug the USB-C end into your tablet.
Plug the RCA ends (the red and white plugs) or the 3.5mm jack into the Input channel of your amplifier.
For Older Tablets with a Headphone Jack:
Simply use a standard 3.5mm to RCA cable to bridge the tablet's headphone port directly to the amplifier's input.
💡 Pro-Tip: If you want to keep your tablet charged during long therapeutic sessions, look for a "USB-C Power Delivery (PD) Splitter Adapter." This allows you to plug in a charger and the audio cable simultaneously.
Step 2: Routing Power to the Mats and Recliners
Once the clean audio signal reaches your amplifier, the amp does the heavy lifting of boosting that signal into physical energy.
Connect the Speaker Output terminals of your amplifier to the input ports on your mat or recliner using high-quality speaker wire or the proprietary cables provided by your manufacturer.
When you play a frequency track on your tablet, the amplifier will now convert those audio waves into tactile vibrations you can actually feel rippling through the furniture.
Step 3: Total Isolation – Feeling the Vibe, Silencing the Room - in case you are using music
A common issue with acoustic resonance therapy is that the lower frequencies together with music can vibrate the air, and the music can interfere effectively turning your entire recliner into a giant loudspeaker. If someone else is in the room reading or sleeping, this can be a major disruption.
To solve this, you can configure your system so you feel the frequencies in your body but hear the audio exclusively through a wired headset.
The Wired Audio Splitter (Most Reliable)
If your amplifier doesn't support simultaneous headphone and speaker output, you can split the signal right at the source (your tablet).
Plug a 3.5mm male Cable into your tablet's adapter.
Connect the other side to the input of the splitter
3. Connect the red-white cable in the back of the amplifier to OUT1 in the splitter
4. Connected the wired earphones to OUT2
You can adjust the volume of the music in the earphones and ofcourse feel the bass in your body from your mat or recliner
Final Thoughts: A Sanctuary of Sound and Silence
By swapping Bluetooth for high-quality analog cables, you aren’t just reducing unnecessary wireless frequencies in your home—you're also unlocking a richer, more powerful sensory experience. You can lay back, turn up the deep Earth frequencies on your mat, enjoy crystal-clear music in your headphones, and leave the rest of the house in absolute peace and quiet.
****Please remember. If you are not using the bluetooth option and you are using headphones for music and you are using cables connecting the mat / recliner, you can remove the white / green banana input cables on the back of the amplifier.
Please contact us if you have any questions
Be well, Avigaili Berg




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