Collins 516F-2 speakers – Bluetooth Conversion

Collins 516F-2 Speaker Cabinet
Bluetooth Speaker Conversion
Dual-Mode AC / Li-Ion Battery Power · Bluetooth 5.0 aptX HD · Dayton Audio KAB-250v4 + LBB-5Sv2 · Ferrite RFI Suppression
Mike Peace VK6ADA  ·  r-390a.net Administrator  ·  March 2026

1. Project Overview

This post documents a complete Bluetooth audio upgrade for the Collins 516F-2 speaker cabinet, adding dual power modes: mains 110 V AC and an internal rechargeable Li-Ion battery pack rated for a minimum five-day autonomous runtime. The design preserves the 516F-2’s vintage aesthetic while delivering modern Bluetooth 5.0 audio with aptX HD fidelity.

The 516F-2 cabinet houses a single full-range 8 Ω speaker. All electronics are self-contained within the existing chassis space, charged from a new rear-panel IEC inlet. No permanent alterations are required to the original power supply transformer or HV circuitry — the standard community practice of speaker-only use applies.

2. System Architecture

2.1 Signal & Power Flow

The system operates as a self-contained Bluetooth mono speaker. Power management is handled by the battery board, which arbitrates between AC and battery sources seamlessly:

  • AC connected: 110 V → 24 V DC switching adapter → LBB-5Sv2 battery board → KAB-250v4 amp → 8 Ω speaker. Batteries charge while playing.
  • Battery only: LBB-5Sv2 (5× 18650) → KAB-250v4 amp → 8 Ω speaker. AC adapter absent; battery output sustains operation automatically.
  • Transition: Plugging or unplugging AC is hot-switchable with no audio interruption. The LBB-5Sv2 manages priority internally.

2.2 Functional Block Diagram

┌─────────────────────┐ │ 110V AC MAINS IEC │ └──────────┬──────────┘ │ ┌──────────▼──────────┐ │ 24V 2A DC Adapter │ (Mean Well or similar) └──────────┬──────────┘ │ DC 24V in (2.1×5.5mm jack) ┌──────────▼──────────┐ │ Dayton LBB-5Sv2 │ ← Charges 5× 18650 @ 24V 2A │ Battery Board │ → 21V DC output (5×Li-Ion series) │ 5× 18650 cells │ └──────────┬──────────┘ │ 21V DC (Molex Mini-Fit) ┌──────────▼──────────┐ │ Dayton KAB-250v4 │ Bluetooth 5.0 + aptX HD │ BT Amp Board │ TPA3116 Class D, 90% efficient │ 2×50W stereo / │ Bridged mono: ~100W @ 8Ω │ 100W bridged mono │ (practical: 10–15W comfortable use) └──────────┬──────────┘ │ Speaker terminals ┌──────────▼──────────┐ │ 516F-2 8Ω Speaker │ └─────────────────────┘

3. Battery Runtime Analysis

3.1 Energy Budget — Five-Day Target

The KAB-250v4 is documented to sustain up to seven days in Bluetooth standby on a single charge from the LBB-5Sv2 with five 18650 cells. The five-day target is comfortably within this envelope. The table below shows the energy budget for a representative daily use pattern.

ModeDraw (21V rail)Daily HoursDaily Wh
BT Standby (idle, paired)~65 mA (≈1.4 W)16 h22.0 Wh
Active listening (moderate, 1W acoustic)~180 mA (≈3.8 W)4 h15.2 Wh
Sleep / powered off~5 mA (≈0.1 W)4 h0.4 Wh
Daily total24 h37.6 Wh

3.2 Cell Selection for 5-Day Runtime

37.6 Wh/day × 5 days = 188 Wh required. The LBB-5Sv2 holds five 18650 cells in series for a 21 V nominal output. Usable capacity (80% depth of discharge) determines cell selection:

Cell OptionCapacityPack Energy (21V×5)80% UsableRuntime
Samsung 18650 INR21700 (2600mAh) — Minimum2600 mAh54.6 Wh43.7 Wh~1.2 days
Samsung 30Q / LG HG2 (3000 mAh)3000 mAh63.0 Wh50.4 Wh~1.3 days
Samsung 40T / Molicel P45B (4000–4500 mAh)4000 mAh84.0 Wh67.2 Wh~1.8 days
⚠ Note on single-board runtime: A single LBB-5Sv2 board (5× 18650) cannot reach the five-day target under the assumed usage profile. Two options exist:
  • Option A — Dual LBB-5Sv2 boards in parallel (recommended): Wire the 21 V outputs together through a 1N5822 Schottky diode on each positive rail. Ten Samsung 40T cells (4000 mAh) yield ~134 Wh usable → ≈3.6 days at 4 h/day listening; ≈5.0 days at 2 h/day.
  • Option B — Single LBB-5v2 with 26650 cells (5000 mAh) × 5: Five Lishen 26650 cells yield ~105 Wh usable → ≈2.8 days. Combine two boards for ~5.6 days.
Recommended configuration: Two LBB-5Sv2 boards + 10× Samsung 40T 18650 4000 mAh cells = ~134 Wh usable.

4. Bill of Materials & Sourcing

All components are available from Amazon US or Parts Express (parts-express.com). AliExpress alternatives are noted where significant cost savings exist.

RefComponentSource / Part #Est. USDQty
A1 Dayton Audio KAB-250v4
BT 5.0 aptX HD, TPA3116 Class D
2×50W stereo / 100W bridged mono
4–8 Ω, 12–24 VDC, 7-day BT standby
Amazon ASIN B09T3SXB97
Parts Express #325-505
$34.951
B1 Dayton Audio LBB-5Sv2
5× 18650, 21 V out @ 4.8 A max
Charges from 5–24 VDC input
Over/under-charge protection
Amazon ASIN B09T3WKVZP
Parts Express #325-502
$31.952
B2 Samsung 40T 18650 4000 mAh
High-drain Li-Ion flat-top
Lishen 18650 3000 mAh also acceptable
Amazon (search: Samsung 40T 18650)
Illumn.com, 18650batterystore.com
$7.50 ea / $75 total10
PS1 24 V 2 A DC Switching Adapter
2.1×5.5mm barrel plug, centre +
UL-listed preferred for mains use
Amazon: search ’24V 2A DC adapter 2.1mm’
Mean Well GS25B24-P1J (premium)
$12–181
PS2 IEC320 C14 Panel Mount Inlet
With inline fuse holder (2A slow-blow)
Fits standard 37×17mm chassis cutout
Amazon: ‘IEC C14 inlet fused panel’
AliExpress: KCD3 IEC inlet fused
$8–121
PS3 IEC C13 Power Cord 6 ft
Standard PC-type mains cable
Amazon: any UL-rated 3-prong C13 cable $6–101
D1–D2 1N5822 Schottky Diode 3A 40V
For parallel battery board OR-ing
Low forward drop (0.35 V typ)
Amazon: Chanzon 1N5822 (25-pack)
AliExpress: 1N5822 schottky
$6 (pack)2
W1 Dayton Audio KAB-FC Function Cable Kit
Pre-terminated harnesses for KAB boards
Volume knob, AUX input, BT reset button
Amazon ASIN B01N9RST4K
Parts Express #325-121
$9.951
V1 Dayton Audio KAB-VC Volume Control
Panel-mount rotary volume pot
Plug-and-play with KAB-FC harness
Parts Express #325-119 $4.951
L1 Dayton Audio LBB-5CL LED Status Kit
External battery charge indicator LEDs
4-LED charge level + power/charging LEDs
Parts Express #325-520 $6.951
Estimated Total ~$200–220
AliExpress alternative for the amp board: Search ‘ZK-502T Bluetooth 5.0 TPA3116 mono amp’ for a bridged-mono variant at ~$12–15. Audio quality is good; BT codec support may be SBC only rather than aptX HD.

5. Wiring Guide

5.1 AC Mains Input

  • Mount the fused IEC C14 inlet on the rear panel. Drill a 37×17 mm rectangular cutout.
  • Connect IEC inlet LIVE (brown) → fuse → adapter LIVE. NEUTRAL (blue) → adapter NEUTRAL. EARTH (green/yellow) → chassis ground stud.
  • Use a short internal cable from the adapter’s 2.1×5.5 mm output to the LBB-5Sv2 input jack.

5.2 Battery Board Connections

  • Install 18650 cells in LBB-5Sv2 boards, observing polarity markings. 21 V output positive from each board → 1N5822 anode. Both 1N5822 cathodes → common 21 V bus.
  • 21 V common bus → KAB-250v4 battery power input (Molex Mini-Fit Jr., red/black harness). Connect all GNDs at a single chassis point.
  • Use the BATTERY input port on the KAB-250v4; leave the DC input port unconnected (the LBB handles priority switching).

5.3 Speaker Output — Bridged Mono

The 516F-2 has a single 8 Ω speaker. Bridge the KAB-250v4 for mono output:

  • Use the LEFT channel (+) output terminal as the positive speaker leg.
  • Use the RIGHT channel (+) output terminal as the negative speaker leg.
  • Leave both (−) speaker terminals unconnected in bridge mode.
⚠ Bridge mode warning: In BTL mode the speaker sees 8 Ω load — within spec for the TPA3116. Do NOT connect the speaker ground to chassis; the bridged output is floating by design.

5.4 Panel-Mount Controls

  • Volume knob (KAB-VC) → rear or side panel. Plug into KAB-FC harness J3 connector.
  • Bluetooth reset button (included with KAB-250v4) → small hole in rear panel. Press once to enter pairing mode.
  • Battery status LEDs (LBB-5CL) → 5-LED cluster on rear panel. Plug into J9 on each LBB-5Sv2 board.
  • Main power switch: SPST rocker on AC inlet side — disconnects AC charging, does not interrupt battery operation.

6. Installation Notes — 516F-2 Chassis

The 516F-2 cabinet provides roughly 9.9″ × 7.8″ × 11.5″ of internal space. With the HV power supply removed or inactivated, the chassis floor offers ample room for all electronics.

  • Mount KAB-250v4 to the chassis floor using nylon standoffs (M3, 10 mm). Board is 3.6″ × 2.7″.
  • Stack two LBB-5Sv2 boards side by side on the chassis floor. Combined footprint: ~9.6″ × 3.6″.
  • Route 24 V adapter internally, or mount externally as a wall-wart with DC cable entering through a rear grommet.
  • Bluetooth antenna: if the cabinet is all-metal, connect an external antenna (Parts Express #325-128) via SMA or U.FL pigtail through a small rear-panel hole.
  • Chassis ventilation: Class D efficiency is 90%. At 10 W average output, dissipation is ~1 W. No forced cooling required.
  • Speaker hookup: desolder existing speaker leads and reconnect directly to KAB bridged output terminals using short-run 20 AWG wire.

7. Charging & Runtime Summary

Charge SourceCharge Time to 90%Notes
24 V 2 A adapter (mains)≈ 2.5 h per LBB board / 5 h totalFast charge — recommended
12 V 2 A (e.g., car charger)≈ 6 h per boardAcceptable if 24 V unavailable
5 V USB 2 A≈ 28 h per boardEmergency only; very slow
Battery runtime (2 h listen/day)≈ 5.0 days27 Wh/day; 134 Wh usable (10× Samsung 40T)
Battery runtime (4 h listen/day)≈ 3.6 days37.6 Wh/day; same pack
BT Standby only (no audio)≈ 8–9 daysMatches Dayton Audio 7-day claim with 2 boards

8. Safety Notes

⚠ HV hazard: The HV circuitry inside a stock 516F-2 (800 VDC B+) is lethal. If the original power supply is still present and connected, discharge all capacitors and isolate mains before working inside the chassis.
⚠ Li-Ion polarity: Cells must be installed with correct polarity. Reversed cells will damage the BMS/protection circuit and can cause thermal runaway.
  • Do not exceed the LBB-5Sv2 maximum output current of 4.8 A per board.
  • Use the fused IEC inlet. A 2 A slow-blow fuse protects the AC feed.
  • The KAB-250v4 includes over/under-voltage and thermal protection. Both protection layers are active simultaneously.
  • Source 18650 cells from reputable suppliers only (Samsung, LG, Molicel, Lishen). Avoid unbranded cells — capacity and safety ratings are fabricated.

9. Internal Chassis Layout — Top-Down View

The diagram below shows a top-down plan view of the 516F-2 interior with the lid removed, drawn to scale (34 px/in). Amber dashed arrows indicate power flow from mains through to the speaker terminals. Components are positioned to reflect actual physical placement on the chassis floor.

front panel (speaker grille) KAB-250v4 BT 5.0 · aptX HD LBB-5Sv2 5 cells LBB-5Sv2 5 cells 24V DC adapter 110V AC → 24V 2A IEC C14 D1, D2 rear panel (IEC inlet · volume · BT reset · LED status) Dayton KAB-250v4 BT 5.0 amp · aptX HD · DSP Dayton LBB-5Sv2 ×2 5× 18650 per board · 21V out 24V DC adapter IEC C13 cord · 2A IEC C14 fused inlet 2A slow-blow · rear panel 2 in / 51 mm 11.5 in

Colour Key

Legend
KAB-250v4 Bluetooth amplifier board
LBB-5Sv2 battery board (×2)
18650 Li-Ion cells (×10 total)
24V DC adapter / IEC C14 inlet
Power flow (amber dashed arrow)

All components mount on nylon M3 standoffs directly to the chassis floor. The KAB-250v4 board (3.6″ × 2.7″) sits nearest the front panel to minimise speaker wire length. The two LBB-5Sv2 boards (4.8″ × 3.6″ each) occupy the central floor area side-by-side. The 24 V DC adapter bridges the rear section, directly above the IEC C14 fused inlet. Total floor footprint of electronics: approximately 9.6″ × 3.6″ — within the available 9.9″ × 7.8″ interior.

10. Ferrite RFI Suppression

10.1 Threat Model — Why This Matters for a Vintage Radio Shack

The 516F-2 conversion introduces three switch-mode noise sources into a shack that almost certainly also contains a Collins R-390A, KWM-2, or S-Line receiver — equipment whose front-end sensitivity spans 500 kHz to 32 MHz. All three noise emitters share a common mechanism: fast-switching transistors generating broadband conducted and radiated interference across that entire range.

Noise SourceMechanismPrimary Emission FrequenciesRisk Level
24V DC switching adapter Flyback or buck converter, typically 65–130 kHz switching frequency with harmonics to 30+ MHz. Conducted noise on AC mains cord and DC output lead. Harmonics at 65 kHz × N: strong up to 30 MHz. Worst harmonics often land on 40m (7 MHz), 80m (3.5 MHz), and broadcast AM (0.5–1.7 MHz). HIGH
TPA3116 Class D amplifier (KAB-250v4) PWM switching at ~300–400 kHz. Output filter attenuates the fundamental but leaves significant common-mode energy on speaker leads and power rails. Radiated via speaker cable acting as antenna. 300–400 kHz fundamental and harmonics to 30 MHz. Speaker leads radiate if unfiltered — particularly problematic for 630m/160m/80m operation. HIGH
LBB-5Sv2 charge controller CC/CV Li-Ion charger with synchronous buck topology. Switching frequency typically 200–500 kHz; lower conducted noise than the mains adapter but still significant on the 21V DC rail. 200–500 kHz and harmonics. Conducted noise on 21V output rail feeds directly into KAB-250v4 power supply rejection path. MEDIUM
2.4 GHz Bluetooth module FHSS spread-spectrum. Fundamental is well above HF, but harmonics and sub-harmonics can appear at HF if the antenna lead is unfiltered. Fundamental 2.4 GHz (no concern). Sub-harmonic leakage rare but possible on LF/MF if antenna cable is unshielded or routed near HF receiver. LOW
Key insight for R-390A / KWM-2 operators: The 24V adapter and TPA3116 amp together produce a near-continuous broadband noise floor raise of 10–30 dB across 3–30 MHz when measured at an HF antenna — even from across the room — if no suppression is applied. Ferrite treatment at the source eliminates this before it couples onto the AC wiring, the shack earth, or radiates from cable runs.

10.2 Ferrite Mix Selection

Ferrite mix (material) selection is critical. The wrong mix provides little suppression in the target frequency range. The three mixes used in this build are all available from Fair-Rite (manufacturer) and Amidon (distributor). Do not substitute generic “ferrite” cores from unknown vendors — permeability and loss characteristics vary widely.

Mix / Materialµ (initial permeability)Peak loss / suppression rangeUse in this build
Mix 31 (Fair-Rite #31)
Manganese-zinc (MnZn)
~1500 1–300 MHz; peak impedance ~30 MHz. Excellent for HF common-mode suppression. AC mains cord, 24V DC lead, speaker leads — primary HF noise suppression
Mix 43 (Fair-Rite #43)
Nickel-zinc (NiZn)
~850 10 MHz – 1 GHz; peak ~200–400 MHz. Better than Mix 31 above 100 MHz. Bluetooth antenna lead; inter-board DC rail beads; any short pigtail lead inside chassis
Mix 77 (Fair-Rite #77)
Manganese-zinc (MnZn)
~2000 0.1–50 MHz; peak ~1–10 MHz. Best for suppressing low-frequency SMPS harmonics in the AM broadcast and 160m/80m range. Optional second pass on 24V DC lead if 160m/80m noise persists after Mix 31 treatment
⚠ Mix 31 vs Mix 43 confusion: Mix 31 (grey/black, Fair-Rite part numbers begin with 2631) is NiZn-based with high loss in the HF range — ideal here. Mix 43 (black, part numbers begin with 2643) peaks higher. Do not use Mix 61 (light grey, 61 material, µ≈125) for this application — it is a low-loss inductor material that will do almost nothing for RFI suppression.

10.3 Suppression Points — Location Map

Seven ferrite suppression points cover all major conducted and radiated noise paths in this build. Locations are referenced to the chassis layout diagram in Section 9.

PointLocationCore / ClampWindingTarget impedance
F1 AC mains cord — as close to IEC C14 inlet as possible, inside cabinet. Snap-on clamp or wound toroid around all three conductors (L+N+E together). Fair-Rite 0431177081 (clamp-on, 31 material, 1.1″ core) or FT240-31 toroid wound Clamp-on: 3 passes through core. Toroid: 5 turns, all conductors together. >200 Ω @ 10 MHz (common mode)
F2 24V DC output lead — from adapter output jack to LBB-5Sv2 input. Wind both wires (+ and −) together as a bifilar pair. FT140-31 toroid (1.40″ OD, Mix 31) 7 bifilar turns of both wires together. Keep turns tight and evenly spaced. >500 Ω @ 5–30 MHz (common mode)
F3 24V DC output lead — optional second choke for enhanced 160m/80m suppression. In series with F2, immediately adjacent. FT114-77 toroid (1.14″ OD, Mix 77) 5 bifilar turns (same lead pair as F2). >300 Ω @ 1–5 MHz (common mode)
F4 21V DC rail — from LBB-5Sv2 output to KAB-250v4 input (the Molex Mini-Fit Jr. harness). Wind + and − together. FT114-31 toroid (1.14″ OD, Mix 31) 5 bifilar turns of both harness wires together. >300 Ω @ 5–30 MHz (common mode)
F5 Speaker leads — from KAB-250v4 output terminals to the 516F-2 8 Ω speaker. Wind both leads together. FT140-31 toroid (1.40″ OD, Mix 31) or 0431177081 clamp-on 3 bifilar turns (audio lead; more turns add inductance that affects bass). Mount close to amp board, not close to speaker. >200 Ω @ 1–30 MHz; <1 Ω @ 20 Hz–20 kHz (audio pass)
F6 Bluetooth external antenna pigtail — if an external SMA antenna is fitted for metal chassis use (see Section 6). Wind the coax through a small bead. Fair-Rite 2643002402 (clamp-on, Mix 43, 0.6″) or FB-43-2402 bead 1 pass through bead, 25mm from chassis exit point. Suppress sub-harmonic leakage above 200 MHz; minimal effect desired at 2.4 GHz fundamental
F7 KAB-FC function cable harness (volume pot wires, BT button lead) — these unshielded control wires act as antennas for TPA3116 switching noise if they run more than 100mm inside the chassis. Fair-Rite 2643102002 snap-on (Mix 43, for ribbon/multi-wire) Snap around the bundled harness wires at the point where they exit the KAB-250v4 board. Suppress PWM harmonics radiated by control wiring

10.4 Winding Instructions

All toroids in this build use the same basic technique. The goal is a common-mode choke: both conductors of a pair wound together so differential-mode current (the audio or DC signal you want) sees effectively zero inductance, while common-mode current (RF noise on both conductors in the same direction) sees a high impedance.

  • Bifilar winding: Twist the two conductors loosely (1–2 twists per cm), then wind both together as a single unit through the core. Each pass through the hole counts as one turn.
  • Turn direction: Does not matter for a common-mode choke — the winding direction cancels the differential inductance regardless of which way you go through the core.
  • Wire gauge: Use a minimum of 20 AWG for the 21V and 24V DC leads (F2, F3, F4) to handle up to 3A without heating. Speaker leads can be 20–18 AWG. Control wires (F7) can be 24–26 AWG as current is negligible.
  • Insulation: Strip the minimum needed at the termination end. Use PTFE-sleeved wire or standard hook-up wire. Do not use bare copper — short circuits on the DC rail are a Li-Ion fire risk.
  • Core gap: Leave a small gap between the last turn and the first turn where the lead enters the core to prevent voltage breakdown. This matters on the 24V rail with any transient overshoot.
  • Securing the choke: Secure the finished toroid with a cable tie to a nylon standoff or dab of RTV silicone to prevent vibration-induced chafing of the winding insulation.
Common-mode choke — bifilar winding example (FT140-31, 7 turns): Wire pair → ─┐ ┌─ to LBB-5Sv2 │ ╭──────╮ │ └──┤ core ├─┘ ╰──────╯ 7 turns both wires wound together Differential (DC/audio): L_net ≈ 0 (flux cancels) Common-mode (RF noise): Z_cm ≈ 500–1500 Ω across HF

10.5 Ferrite Bill of Materials

All parts are available from Mouser Electronics, Digi-Key, or directly from Amidon Associates (amidon-inductive.com). Fair-Rite part numbers are listed; Amidon equivalents are shown in parentheses.

RefPart / DescriptionFair-Rite P/NAmidon equiv.SourceEst. USDQty
F1 Clamp-on snap ferrite, Mix 31, 1.1″ core ID — fits 6–9mm cable bundle 0431177081 BSB-31-1105 Mouser, Digi-Key, Amazon $3.501
F2 Toroid core, Mix 31, 1.40″ OD × 0.90″ ID × 0.55″ — FT140-31 5977003801 FT-140-31 Amidon, Mouser #623-5977003801 $4.501
F3 (optional) Toroid core, Mix 77, 1.14″ OD × 0.75″ ID × 0.295″ — FT114-77 5977007701 FT-114-77 Amidon, Mouser $3.751
F4 Toroid core, Mix 31, 1.14″ OD × 0.75″ ID × 0.295″ — FT114-31 5977003101 FT-114-31 Amidon, Mouser #623-5977003101 $3.251
F5 Toroid core, Mix 31, 1.40″ OD (same as F2) — can reuse FT140-31 5977003801 FT-140-31 Amidon, Mouser $4.501
F6 Clamp-on snap ferrite, Mix 43, 0.6″ core ID — for coax / thin cable 2643002402 BSB-43-0604 Mouser #623-2643002402 $2.751
F7 Snap-on ferrite for ribbon/multi-wire, Mix 43 — 10mm opening 2643102002 BSB-43-1001 Mouser #623-2643102002 $2.501
Wire 20 AWG hook-up wire, PTFE or PVC insulated, red/black pair — 1 metre of each colour for winding F2–F5 Amazon, Digi-Key $5.001 m ea
Estimated Ferrite Sub-Total ~$30

10.6 Verification — Did It Work?

The most practical verification method available to an amateur operator is the receiver itself. With the 516F-2 Bluetooth system powered and an HF receiver on a typical antenna:

  • Before ferrite treatment: Tune across 3.5–14 MHz on the R-390A or KWM-2 with the BFO on. Note the noise floor and any periodic hash or heterodynes attributable to the switching supplies.
  • After installing F1 and F2 (AC mains and 24V DC lead): the dominant SMPS noise contribution should drop significantly. Most operators report a 15–25 dB reduction in the S-meter noise floor.
  • After installing F4 and F5 (21V rail and speaker leads): any residual TPA3116 PWM hash should disappear. The Class D amp is typically the louder source when driven with audio.
  • If noise persists on 160m or 80m after all chokes are installed, add the optional F3 (Mix 77, FT114-77) in series with F2 on the 24V lead.
  • For waterfall verification, a before/after waterfall screenshot across 0–30 MHz on any connected receiver or transceiver provides a definitive record of suppression achieved.
Real-world result benchmark: A well-ferrite-treated Class D speaker near an R-390A should add no more than 1–2 S-units of noise floor increase at the receiver on any HF amateur band. An untreated setup routinely adds 5–10 S-units. The target is S0 at the receiver with the Bluetooth speaker playing music at full volume.