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🔊 Elevate your sound game—wireless freedom meets DIY mastery!
The DROK Bluetooth Board is a compact, high-quality audio receiver module supporting Bluetooth 4.2 with versatile 5V-12V power input. Designed for DIY enthusiasts and professionals, it features dual 3.5mm and 2.54mm AUX inputs and outputs, delivering reliable wireless audio streaming with clean, uncolored sound. Its robust build and clear LED indicators make it an ideal upgrade for older stereos, headphones, or custom home sound systems.













| ASIN | B07P94Z9XR |
| Best Sellers Rank | #21,226 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #20 in Audio Component Receivers |
| Brand Name | DROK |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 520 Reviews |
| Included Components | board |
| Item Dimensions | 2.2 x 1.3 x 0.14 inches |
| Item Weight | 0.03 Kilograms |
| Item dimensions L x W x H | 2.2 x 1.3 x 0.14 inches |
| Manufacturer | DROK |
| Material Type | Printed Circuit Board (Pcb) |
| Maximum Supply Voltage | 12 Volts (DC) |
| Minimum Supply Voltage | 5 Volts |
| Model | 200367AFA |
| Mounting Type | Surface Mount |
| Number of Channels | 2 |
| Part Number | 200367AFA |
| Specification Met | Unspecified Standards |
| Voltage | 12 Volts |
| Warranty Description | 2 Year Manufacturer |
L**A
Really Great
I’ve been using this Drok Bluetooth audio module for a few days now, and it’s been working great. It connects easily to my phone and the sound quality is solid for what it is. I installed it in a 10-year-old Makita jobsite stereo that originally had no Bluetooth. I wired the audio output directly to the radio’s internal AUX input by tapping into the 3.5mm jack PCB—worked perfectly and kept the install clean. For power, I tapped into the battery connection PCB and added a bulkhead rocker switch on the side of the radio to turn the module on and off independently. The stereo runs on a 20V Makita battery, and even though the module’s cut sheet says 12V (with the website claiming 27V max), it handles the 20V just fine. No issues with overheating or instability. I mounted the board inside the radio using hot glue. It’s been sitting out in the sun during use, and while the top of the radio gets warm, it doesn’t get hot. You can tell the module is inside doing its job, but it’s not stressed. The board itself feels like a higher-quality unit than many of the cheap Bluetooth modules out there. The PCB is clean, the build is solid, and it even comes with documentation—which is rare. It seems like buying a single unit results in better quality control. Honestly, if I had bought a two-pack, I’d half expect one to fail and just use the backup. But this one has been reliable from the start. Overall, I’d recommend this module if you’re upgrading an older stereo or building a basic portable Bluetooth system. There are much higher-end DACs out there for home audio, but for portable or jobsite use, this is a great solution that works well and sounds good.
G**.
5-stars, no complaints
I am a purchasing consumer reviewing a product I purchased. I am not receiving anything for posting this. 5-stars easy. No complaints, I bought two Some of the reviews below state this board is a 24-35V device. It uses a GH27G / AZ1117E power input chip, that's only designed for 13V max. I STRONGLY DOUBT this device can withstand over-voltage by a factor of 2x-3x. The Amazon product description seems correct at 12V. Disclaimer: I only power mine with a standard 5V micro USB cable. I haven't actually tried it at higher voltages. [5/8/25] 2 Month review. I stand by everything posted below. After 2 months this BT board has been absolutely bomb-proof reliable. I use it every night, all night to listen to relaxing music and fall asleep. The BT radio has never dropped out or dis-connected from my old iPad. The analog side of the circuit has been just as reliable. Outstanding. [3/21/25] After several more days/nights of critical listening I stand by all my initial impressions below. I don't know if its component burn-in or what but something slightly "bloomed". The sound image is more layered now compared to a Y-RCA cable straight out of the ipad headphone jack. The harmonic content surrounding notes, room acoustics and ambience in recordings seems slightly more distinct now. The sonic differences between L/R Multi-tracked instrumentation are a little bit clearer and easier to hear. There also seems to be more energy at the extremes of the sonic spectrum. Below ~45Hz is bloomier and more resonant. Above ~6K seems more delicate, articulate and refined. The difference is very slight mind you, maybe an ~8% perceptional difference (if that). It's (honestly) probably just my hearing perception adjusting and picking it up for the first time. This is my finding with all my headphones, none of which are commonly known to be high-detail revealing. I am going to dust off my old AKG K701 and Koss A250 today and give a listen with those. Those are my most analytical / accurate headphones. FWIW I am not a 100% believer in electronic component "burn-in". I know for me personally my hearing perception sensitivity can vary greatly. I am a STRONG believer in blind A/B listening tests, and that's really the only way to validate my impressions. The eyes can strongly influence what the brain / ears hear. I attached a pic of my electrical tape mod to help dim the blue flashing LED. The instructions have an illustration with headphones plugged directly into the TRS output jack. I tried that and it was awful. Probably a gross impedance miss-match with lower Z cans and IEMs, and a severe power deficiency with my 300 ohm HD650. I would only use this as a line-level device. [3/13/25] I power with a micro-USB plug. Plug into my Larocco PPA headphone amp with a cheap RCA "Y" cable. I use an ipad as BT source for ALAC and 320k mp3 files. Absolutely no issues what so ever after 3 nights of critical listening. The circuit is "black background" silent. No hiss, no hum, no clicks/pops or digital artifact noises of any kind regardless of ipad volume setting. No radio frequency noise / interference either. Sound quality seems to be well balanced no offending boost or cuts to the sonic spectrum. It is a very "dry / uncolored" sounding circuit when used as a line level device. I A/B compared it with a plain "Y" cable out of my ipad... and I really could not hear any significant sonic differences. These impressions were made using sennheiser HD650, Koss KSC75, Grado HF-1, Truthear Zero Red, JBL T110. Frankly I am pleasantly surprised. BT connectivity / reliability has been solid... as reliable as the cheap RCA-Y cable it replaces. I bought two of these so I could use my headphone amps with BT. This will help reduce some of the wires and clutter on my desk and nightstand. I will probably mount one in a small project box and just use a micro-USB plug for power. The second one I think I can squeeze in the second amps enclosure, and tap into the 12V DC part of the circuit. The blue LED is CRAZY bright at night. I cover it with a small piece of black electrical tape and it helps. I wish it were the opposite, solid ON when connected to BT and flashing when waiting to be paired. But that's not nearly major enough to take away a star. Reliability of course remains to be seen. I will post dated updates to this review as my opinions change.
A**8
Works well with 12v power
Decent Bluetooth receiver module. I like how robust it is built. Also really like that there are numerous input/ output power and signal interfaces. Very convenient for building boomboxes and such. No annoying voice prompts when pairing and connects to my iOS devices immediately. My only gripe with this receiver is that there is still mild ground loop background noise coming through the speakers even though I used a high quality dc-dc isolating converter to clean up the power. It’s not horribly loud, but I feel there should be no audible ground loop feedback at all if the power supplied has been properly isolated.
A**R
Slick Bluetooth Upgrade Solution
This is a neat Bluetooth solution for anyone wishing to add Bluetooth Audio connectivity to an amplified speaker setup. For me what is particularly useful is the 3.5mm Stereo AUX IN connector to OUT connector relay switching which helps maintain low noise signal integrity and isolation - super handy if you already use a 3.5mm plug assembly to connect you sound source to your amplified speaker (or headphones). You will of course need an additional short 3.5mm plug-to-plug cable to complete that setup where the DROK simply sits between your existing sound source and speaker/headphones. So far (a few hours of use), the sound quality is good and no Bluetooth compatibility issues, even when paired with device, pairing mode is invoked at power up if you wish to pair to another sound source (provided you turn off your already paired devices). Build quality looks fine and the supplied connectors & terminated wiring assemblies plus wide supply voltage range make this easy to embed inside the electronics of your amplified speaker system for a seamless Bluetooth upgrade. Bluetooth audio output level is a little on the low side (I was using micro-USB power) for my particular setup but that may not be an issue with the DROK, I had to run the iPhone at full volume to get sufficient drive audio into my amplified speakers. Zero complaints so far on this unit, my only "wish-list" item would be a memory card slot for direct playing of digital audio files too. I'll definitely consider buying this module again when upgrading other audio systems to Bluetooth connectivity.
I**N
This is the best one. Trust me
I have been through like 6 of these. All from various different Ali sellers or bay purchases. This is by far and away the BEST module of the bunch. No, it's not $5.88 ; no it doesn't come with an enclosure, a power supply or a back rub. What it DOES come with ? A well made PCB that's thick and coated. properly and firmly secured SMD components, headers and jumper cables for your project. EXCELLENT quality all around. One word of note for some of you. If you're supplying power to this device from the project you're putting out audio INTO, you're likely going to have some level of Ground Loop noise. It's just the way it is. Your best option for in the car use cases is to isolate it from Radio power either with a DC-DC isolator or provide it battery power. I haven't tested current draw on this but I can't imagine it's more than a few dozen mA. If you're using this integrated into another device, you probably will find it much easier to isolate it. In the car, everything is shared ground so your options are more limited. The other thing you need to be aware of is that the power jack on this is probably fine for prototyping but I would probably want to upgrade it to a screw terminal or direct solder a power qd jumper to it if you plan to mount it semi-permanently into an enclosure etc. I feel like enough vibration or a single shock to the box would knock the power wires out. It's not very 'bitey' and even using dupont cable male probes, they didn't wanna stay in the port. It's just the nature of these very small components. It's probably intended for like 26g wire.
A**N
Excellent compact bluetooth module, very versatile for DIY projects.
Short and simple: Small, runs on almost any common DC voltage (5V-35V), great sound quality, little power draw, connects quickly and seamlessly. Great for almost any DIY bluetooth project, this is the one to buy. The long story: Used this in a project I just finished, a late 1980s Panasonic RX-FM16 boombox. Instead of D cells the boombox is now powered by an Anker USB battery pack through a USB to 9V adapter. I connected the module also off the 9V line and put it on a switch so it could be turned off when the radio is being used on FM/AM bands. Through some research I was able to figure out which IC on the radio's mainboard was the tape-preamp and remove it, then wire the output from this module (through a 3.5mm male cable) to the pre-amp output pins. Simply push the play button on the tape deck (which now has the motor disconnected and removed) and the amplifier turns on, then switch on the bluetooth module on and you have your music in crystal clear sound. As you can also see everything tucks neatly away in the original battery compartment, as if it was meant to be. Don't mind the hot glue. I've had zero issues with connectivity and the sound quality is excellent, no issues running on 9V but your mileage may vary. Unit connects immediately.
L**Z
Great Bluetooth
This is great Bluetooth receiver ez to hook up ex to connect and works great from my phone to my USA 230 you want Bluetooth get this product
T**N
Good little module
I bought the module to install in my old BOSE Acoustimass system. I was able to tap the +15V power rail in the Bose system to power it. Connected the supplied connectors and cables to the Preamp input and closed up the unit. Set the tone controls neutral and the volume to about 3/4 When the system is turned on the Bluetooth unit automatically goes into pair mode, making it easy to pair the unit to just about anything. When it pairs I hear a notification tone through the unit and then I'm ready to go. The reason for 1 star off is when the unit is not receiving any music or Audio, you can hear digital noise / buzzing in a silent room, coming from the speakers. So the Bluetooth communications are being picked up by the amp section. This may be avoided with better shielding between the BT module and the preamp section, which I may try later. You can't completely shield the BT module because the built in antenna is mounted on the board. However you can add an external antenna using the U-FL connector on the board. Relocating the Antenna to a different place may help with the noise. Other than the digital noise in complete silence, the unit is great and the overall sound quality is good. I'm happy with the unit. BTW adding a microphone to the Built in 3.5mm input jacks will make the BT module a handsfree phone system as well.
P**O
Excelente para proyectos/actualizaciones
Usé éste módulo para actualizar un amplificador Sony TA-A50 al hacer la interfase a una entrada que originalmente es destinada para un sintonizador de radio. Naturalmente la instalación requiere de soldadura y un vistazo al manual con los diagramas eléctricos para saber el lugar para instalar la conexión. Suena bien, cumple su función. Me agrada que el módulo tenga provisión para antena externa, pues instalar una ayudará a incrementar el rango de operación. Ampliamente recomendado.
A**Z
En proceso de instalacion el módulo solo tiene audio en el canal derecho
Esta en proceso de pruebas
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 week ago