I thought I'd pass along my experience here in case anyone is considering going back to a stock radio.
As a recent new owner of a 1989 convertible, I have been very disappointed with the aftermarket CD player head unit that was in my car. It's a Sony unit that was installed in 1991 or so (I have the receipt). So, I decided to buy a used cassette with sliders head unit from a member here.
To start, I found the Premium Sound amp in my trunk and discovered the harness had been cut. Evidently, when the aftermarket unit was installed, they ran new speaker wire from the deck back to the trunk, where they spliced into the speaker wires.
I got some crimp connectors and re-spliced everything in the trunk harness back to stock. Then I pulled the deck and cut the speaker wires that had been added. After I removed the deck and harness that came with it, I went about matching up the stock wires to the stock head unit. I got it all hooked up and turned it on. It immediately sounded better than the aftermarket unit, but I realized I only had front speakers working. I looked around and found two wires attached to a connector that was similar in layout to the speaker connectors I had attached to the head unit. I made an educated guess that the connector was probably used for the older style fader, since the wire colors were the same as the front speaker wires, but these also had stripes. I spliced these two wires into the corresponding front speaker wires and the rear speakers worked perfectly!
The sound of this setup is a huge step up from the aftermarket unit. I'm very happy with the results.
As far as drawbacks, I don't have a fader, so I cannot adjust, but I have always run my car stereos flat EQ, center balance and fader.
I tried to solder in an 1/8" cable to use with my iPhone, but it did not work. The sound of the cassette cut out when I plugged the cable into my iPhone, but the iPhone would not pass sound properly. I could barely hear it come through. I figured it was a bad solder job or crossed wires. I took a look inside, but I didn't want to mess with it anymore and decided I'll go with a cassette adapter, or FM transmitter/charger.
Also, the AM band did not work. I suspect my digging around inside to install the 1/8" cable may have something to do with that problem.
As a recent new owner of a 1989 convertible, I have been very disappointed with the aftermarket CD player head unit that was in my car. It's a Sony unit that was installed in 1991 or so (I have the receipt). So, I decided to buy a used cassette with sliders head unit from a member here.
To start, I found the Premium Sound amp in my trunk and discovered the harness had been cut. Evidently, when the aftermarket unit was installed, they ran new speaker wire from the deck back to the trunk, where they spliced into the speaker wires.
I got some crimp connectors and re-spliced everything in the trunk harness back to stock. Then I pulled the deck and cut the speaker wires that had been added. After I removed the deck and harness that came with it, I went about matching up the stock wires to the stock head unit. I got it all hooked up and turned it on. It immediately sounded better than the aftermarket unit, but I realized I only had front speakers working. I looked around and found two wires attached to a connector that was similar in layout to the speaker connectors I had attached to the head unit. I made an educated guess that the connector was probably used for the older style fader, since the wire colors were the same as the front speaker wires, but these also had stripes. I spliced these two wires into the corresponding front speaker wires and the rear speakers worked perfectly!
The sound of this setup is a huge step up from the aftermarket unit. I'm very happy with the results.
As far as drawbacks, I don't have a fader, so I cannot adjust, but I have always run my car stereos flat EQ, center balance and fader.
I tried to solder in an 1/8" cable to use with my iPhone, but it did not work. The sound of the cassette cut out when I plugged the cable into my iPhone, but the iPhone would not pass sound properly. I could barely hear it come through. I figured it was a bad solder job or crossed wires. I took a look inside, but I didn't want to mess with it anymore and decided I'll go with a cassette adapter, or FM transmitter/charger.
Also, the AM band did not work. I suspect my digging around inside to install the 1/8" cable may have something to do with that problem.

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