Airport Express Usb Hard Drive Hack
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May 27, 2014 Apple may have considered including USB hard drive support in the AirPort Express initially released in June of 2012, according to an early support manual unearthed by French site Journal Du Lapin (via iPhone in Canada). AirPort Express – $99; Car with an aux input in the stereo and a free. You'll need to modify the AirPort Express so that it draws power from a USB. You've made it through the hard part, hopefully without melting your. Solder to break, as you drive over our cities' pothole-riddled streets. Happy hacking!
All models of these base stations provide a USB 2.0 port to which you can connect a compatible, properly formatted USB drive:
- AirPort Time Capsule 802.11n
- AirPort Time Capsule 802.11ac
- AirPort Extreme 802.11n
- AirPort Extreme 802.11ac
The disk must be formatted as Mac OS Extended, FAT16, or FAT32. Apple recommends Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for additional resilience in case the drive is disconnected or turned off while in use. AirPort base stations don't support encrypted formats or disks formatted as APFS, ExFAT, or NTFS.
After connecting the formatted USB drive to your base station, choose Finder > Preferences, then select ”External disks” to see the shared drive in the Finder sidebar. Your base station might also support using Time Machine with that disk.
A disk formatted as Mac OS Extended is shared using the SMB/CIFS and AFP protocols, and Mac computers can identify it using the Bonjour protocol. A disk formatted as FAT16 or FAT32 is shared using the SMB/CIFS protocol.
Power requirements
The USB port of your base station can provide power to bus-powered USB drives that follow the USB 2.0 power specification. If your USB drive or hub came with its own power supply, you should probably use it.
Compatibility with Time Machine
Time Machine supports compatible USB drives connected to all models of these base stations:
- AirPort Time Capsule 802.11n
- AirPort Time Capsule 802.11ac
- AirPort Extreme 802.11ac
The disk must not be encrypted, but you can set up Time Machine to encrypt backups to the disk.
Twitter software engineer Ben Novakovic, one of the guys who built We Are Hunted, which would eventually become Twitter #Music, is a clever person.
In his spare time, Novakovic devised a way to modify an Apple Airport Express so that it runs efficiently in your car, allowing you or any of your passengers to play the music on their phone — or even stream it using Rdio, Spotify, Twitter #Music, or any other app.
This is awesome… at least until self-driving cars ruin the party.
It’s also not the easiest thing in the world, but that is no reason not to try it. And yes, we know, you can use one of those converters that turns your car’s “cigarette lighter” power source into a standard household plug, and simply attach the AirPort Express to that, allowing you to pull off this trick by simply skipping down to Step Eight of this tutorial, where you tweak your phone and AirPort Express settings. However, as Novakovic told us, in that scenario “you are essentially converting from 12V DC -> 110V AC -> 3.3V DC which is a bit of a waste really, and inverters get hot and are just annoying as they can be quite large.”
Good points.
If you are bold enough to pop open an Apple AirPort Express and modify its innards, here’s how to hack Apple AirPort Express to put AirPlay in your car, courtesy of our pal Ben. We edited his original post down a bit to clarify things for the non-technically-inclined, so if you want the unexpurgated version, go here.
I solved a #firstworldproblem today – wireless audio in my car.
Basically, I was fed up with having so many cables floating around and getting tangled, and I wasn’t happy with the compressed audio quality with Bluetooth, so I decided to come up with a better wireless audio solution.
Requirements:
- AirPort Express – $99
- Car with an aux input in the stereo and a free “cigarette lighter” power plug
- Star/Torx screwdriver – $8
- Regular screwdriver – you already have one.
- USB cable – we all have spares of these too.
- 5V to 3.3V DC stepdown converter - $4
- A soldering iron & some solder – $8
- Super glue – $5
- Cigarette lighter-to-USB converter: $5-$15
- A little electrical tape – $5
1. Open the AirPort Express
Okay, deep breath. First, you’ll need to modify the AirPort Express so that it draws power from a USB cable, instead of its usual household plug. In this post to the North American Subaru Impreza Owners Club forum, user “enjoiful” describes one technique for this, which Evolver.fm paraphrases as follows (you might want to check out his or her photos too, for help with this part).
To pop open the AirPort Express, stick your regular screwdriver in the seams of the AirPort Express at the corners and try some twisting and prying motions. It should pop open easily.
2. Deal with the Boards
Unscrew all of the circuit boards from the AirPort Express. You can get rid of the L-shaped power supply, because we’re going to wire the USB power to the 5V-to-3.3V converter and use that instead.
3. Open the Cable
Cut the USB cable, and peel the wrapping towards the larger plug (the one that normally connects to your computer), because you want to keep that side. This will reveal four wires:
- Green : USB Data
- White : USB Data
- Red : +5V DC
- Black : Ground
4. Soldering!
We are only interested in the red and black wires inside of that USB cable, because there’s no data coming over the USB cable. After threading the wires through the hole in the side of the AirPort Express (pictured above), solder the black one onto the ground of the AirPort Express (see photos below).
Then, connect the red one to the VIN (voltage input) wire of the stepdown converter, which is green in this photo, and tape around that connection like this:
The stepdown converter has an output wire leading out of it, which is blue in the above photo. Solder that to the power input of the AirPort Express, as pictured above.
Finally, solder the stepdown module’s ground wire (green in the above photo) to the AirPort Express’s ground. So, that’s two wires connected to the AirPort Express’s ground connection; they’re black and green.
When you’re done with all the soldering, you should be looking at something like this:
5. Superglue
You’ve made it through the hard part, hopefully without melting your brain or burning down your house. Congratulations! Now, you’ll want to super-glue everything into place so that it doesn’t jiggle around, potentially causing the solder to break, as you drive over our cities’ pothole-riddled streets.
6. Snap It Together, Tape Over the Hole
Snap the AirPort Express back together. Then, use another little bit of electrical tape to seal up the hole on the edge of the AirPort Express, so that dirt and dust doesn’t get in there, like so:
7. Connect It To Your Car
It’s time to use this thing. Put it in your car, connect the USB power cable to a cigarette lighter adapter, and plug that into your car.
Then, take the audio cable that came with the AirPort Express and connect that to your car’s input. But wait! You’re not done yet, because you’ll need to set up the AirPort Express and your iPhone or iPad the right way (or Android, because those can totally support AirPlay, as weird as that is).
8. Configure the AirPort Express
This looks a bit convoluted, but it’s not, and you only have to do it once.
With the AirPort Express powered up and running, fire up Apple’s AirPort Utility on your laptop, in the car. (You can also do this before tackling any of the steps above, but we wanted to make sure you make it this far before bothering with the software tweaks.) AirPort Utility will display your modified AirPort Express in a list similar to this:
Click the device and select ‘Edit.’ First, give it a name & a password so you can connect to it later to configure it.
Click the ‘Internet’ tab. Choose “Connect Using: DHCP,” and leave everything else blank:
Then click ‘Internet Options.’ In the Configure IPv6 option, choose Local-link only and hit ‘Save’:
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Now, head over to the ‘Wireless’ tab. You want to set the network mode to ‘Create a wireless network,’ and give it a name. Select your security level and give it a password – this will be the password you and your friends will use to connect their devices to your car’s wireless audio system:
Click ‘Wireless Options,’ make sure the details appear correct for your region, and press ‘Save’:
Almost done. You’ll need to select the ‘Network’ tab and set the Router Mode to ‘DHCP and NAT,’ like this:
Then, click ‘Network Options’ and set the DHCP Lease time to 1 day. Set the IPv4 DHCP range to 10.0.1.2 to 200, and make sure ‘Enable NAT Port Mapping Protocol’ is selected. Hit ‘Save’:
Okay, now click the ‘AirPlay’ tab. Make sure ‘Enable AirPlay’ is checked. You can give the the speaker a different name if you wish, but I just left it the same as my AirPort Express WiFi name. You can also set an AirPlay password, but there’s no point, really, because people will already need a password to connect in the first place:
Click ‘Update’ to close the dialog and drop you back to the main AirPort screen. From here, you will see the little icon next to the name as an orange dot, and the light on the front of the device will also be orange. To stop this from happening, click the device in the AirPort utility (as per the first screenshot in this section), and click each of the warnings that appear and select ‘ignore,’ as we don’t care about them.
This will turn the little light green, and you’re almost ready to go. And remember, you won’t have to do any of the stuff above this again — it’s locked and loaded. However, you do still need to set up your iPhone for this to work, too.
9. Configure your iPhone or iPad (or Android)
You need to make your iPhone, iPad, or Android connect to the AirPort Express to send music, but to the cellular data network for everything else (including streaming music). We’re going to walk through the instructions for iOS here; Android people using these apps or these ones can apply similar principles on that platform.
Open the iOS Settings menu, tap WiFi, and tap new AirPort Express network. This will connect the iPhone or iPad to your new car-based WiFi network — but you’ll find that because the AirPort Express doesn’t have an internet connection, the Internet won’t work on your phone. But we can fix that. Tap the blue arrow next to the name of the AirPort Express WiFi network to view more options.
From the following screen, select ‘Static’ as the type of IP address, and then enter the following IP address and Subnet Mask:
IP Address : 10.0.1.4 (for example)
Subnet Mask: 255.255.0.0
Make sure you leave Router, DNS, and Search Domains blank! This tells the iPhone that it should use its cellular network to route internet traffic rather than trying to do it via WiFi.
And you’re done! Just one thing to keep in mind here though: When you’re connected on your AirPort Express WiFi network, the ‘data’ icon at the top of your iOS screen won’t look like the WiFi network symbol, the way it normally does when connected to WiFi. Instead, you’ll see the cellular icon — E, 3G, 4G or LTE, depending on your data plan. Never fear, your phone is actually connected to the WiFi network for the purposes of AirPlay, just like we want it to be:
Just for fun, here’s what it looks like when you play music from the iOS music app, Spotify, and Rdio:
Now, whenever you get into your car, you can simply change the iPhone settings slightly, and you’ll be up and running. And any other passengers in your car with iOS can take over as DJ whenever they want. Happy hacking!
Photos: Ben Novakovic
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