Thanks Rocketman for the referral, I have researched the Aurora Designs conversion but was concerned which dealer to use. The Aurora Designs website lists a lot and didn't know who to trust with my radio.I had my original AM 8-track radio converted to modern AM/FM with input jack and bluetooth by Mike at Resto Radio ( https://retroradio.biz/ ).
I'm probably nobhelp here. I also bought classic autosounds best direct fit replacement radio. It's still new in the box, also probably will sell to any 7173er for a cheaper price. I ended up just putting a Bluetooth sound bar that attaches to my roll cage, taken from an off road side by side. It actually sounds great.For the 740 - I had a question. What you you recommend regarding speaker wiring for dual 4ohm voice coil dash center, 4ohm R&L door speakers, 6ohm R&L rear speaker and powered slim subwoofer? I think RCA to the sub, straight wiring to the side and rears but not sure how to handle the center also? What would you recommend? A 2 or 4 channel amp?
Any details on which one you chose?I recently installed a headless stereo in one of my cars. You can leave your factory AM radio in the dash and just not use it.
The aftermarket one is just a little black box with a wired controller coming out of it. You pair your phone to it and stream music over bluetooth from spotify/apple music/pandora/youtube.
It has the usual car stereo things like constant 12 input, switched 12v input, ground, preamp outputs, and pairs of wires for 4 speakers. The remote can be stashed in the glovebox, console, or under the seat.
BOSS Audio Systems MC900B. So far, its a couple years old and still working fine. I like that it pairs with my phone in under a couple seconds when I turn on the key. I stuck the wired remote for it in the ash tray of my truck. It closes up nicely and hides out of sight. The only buttons I need to use on a regular basis are the volume up and down. Everything else is done on the phone. I guess if I had to complain about anything, maybe its underpowered. It sounds like a $150 radio. So you get what you pay for. I have not bothered to wire up an amp and a subwoofer to give it some balls.Any details on which one you chose?
I have a buddy that took a factory AM/FM cassette out of an 80 something Ford and installed it in his 72 Mustang. It looks stock and correct other than you know it never happened, but I wouldn't care as long as you aren't hacking the dash then it is all reversible. He has a ton of good cassettes that he loves and carries them in the briefcase like back in the day. He still has some mix tapes he made for his then girl friend/now wife and they still play. Trick is finding a radio that the tape deck still works or finding someone who can repair it. Just a suggestion that might work for you.Thanks for the input. I was hoping for AM/FM and maybe a cassette player? I still have a lot of great tapes. I am really not all that up to date on the technology side of things as you can probably guess from the cassettes, but if I could at least listen to FM radio that would be great.
Here's the Radio I think tpj71mach is talking about. I have it in my car. It's a 1980-84 Ford Pickup or Van radio apparently. My uncle installed this in my car when he owned it many decades ago because they too wanted the cassette player, which I've enjoyed. I took this out during my interior project, thinking it was factory original (I didn't have my Marti report yet), because of how it looks. Ebay has at least three listed when I last checked, but they'll probably need work like mine does. The reception of the channels has a lot of static and the tape does to a modest extent. I've been considering getting another radio myself that is true to the AM/FM that came with the car.I have a buddy that took a factory AM/FM cassette out of an 80 something Ford and installed it in his 72 Mustang. It looks stock and correct other than you know it never happened, but I wouldn't care as long as you aren't hacking the dash then it is all reversible. He has a ton of good cassettes that he loves and carries them in the briefcase like back in the day. He still has some mix tapes he made for his then girl friend/now wife and they still play. Trick is finding a radio that the tape deck still works or finding someone who can repair it. Just a suggestion that might work for you.
Wasn't the suppressor/choke to cut down on the hum you'd get through the speakers? In some cars where this is not working correctly, you can rev the motor and the pitch of the humming will rise and fall with engine RPM.Here's pictures of this radio in my bezel. Don't really know what this suppressor choke is/does exactly? It was just wired & laying behind the radio on the transmission tunnel. If you do decide to get this I have a little additional info on wiring I could post/send you but it's not complete.
Bob
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