Toro
Oh, Hello!
- Jan 27, 2012
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Its really not hard to install, honestly the hardest part is popping the panels on your car and running a clean install.... which is more a pain than actually hard. (Sub,speaker, amp and aftermarket headunit install) aside from popping the panels the only real trouble is finding a GOOD ground for the wires.OMM: wishing I had technical skills to fix my radio. It's been since October when I bought the car that the radio just died. I can take it apart, wait for it to reset and then put it back together, but it only lasts about a day before it dies again. So I've been rolling with a JBL Bluetooth speaker. I got a bonus from work, and in the next few weeks I'll be reimbursed a goodly sum for passing my ABO exam, and a raise with it, so I thought it would be a good time to check out how much fixing it would cost... They quoted me twelve hundred dollars to replace the radio- just replace the radio- that's not even new speakers, an amp or a sub, just to replace the radio unit itself...... That's just so far out of what I can afford even with a raise coming... I need a Plan B, but I'm just hitting dead ends.
I certainly wouldn't pay 1200 for the work.
Its even easier if you go from a factory radio to a same factory radio..... the hardest part on that would likely be obtaining security codes (IF your radio comes with the security feature) otherwise it should be a simple plug and play. If you can take the radio apart and "reset it" youd be amazed how easy the work is to do yourself with just a little homework (knowing where to pop the panels on your car and how to do it without damage etc...)
Either way you go Id suggest doing a little homework on your car and process first.... your audio set up could be much better if you aren't putting forward 1200 just for install.
The first system I installed I thought it would be far more complex and was a bit intimidated at first.
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