Welcome to Club Lexus, the world's largest and most active online community of Lexus owners and enthusiasts.
You are currently viewing our forums as a guest, which gives you limited access to view most discussions and access our other features. By joining our community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join the Club Lexus community today (click here to register)!
I was actually one of the first person in the country to get the SC430.
Car has been flawless for me.
Ok... Newb Question - I'm sure it's been answered a hundred times here.
Last year I replaced the Radio Module. And it was some aftermarket radio and the guy who put it in.
To put it bluntly - I'm not happy with the replacement. The guy who put it in couldn't find a good face for it and the radio doesn't really "fit" right.
And on top of that - he had to disable the Nav Unit to do it.
So here's my questions:
1) Does Lexus Make a new radio module I could buy from Lexus? I don't want to buy the old 2002 radio model since it had a cassette thing in it.
2) If not - does anyone have a suggestion on a good aftermarket model that fits in nicely?
Thanks in advance.
Gene
This ad is not displayed to registered members. Register your free account today and become a member on Club Lexus!
THE radio is still basically the same They still come with a cassette player Kind of dumb you think. I believe your radio was ML . If it was your probably better off going back to it . What happed to your original radio. There is a radio repair company that people in the club have recomended. I Think he rebuilds the radios for uuder 300.00. You also might have soem amplifier issues as well as speaker issues , The OEM speakers have gotten some bad reviews. Hope this helps you
__________________
2005 SC430 Pebble Beach nav tool back up camera vias sirius radio daizen front & rear anti sway greaseable zerks blitz throttle controler in ash tray windscreen deflector 8 disk dvd trunk changer dvd/tv tuner in glove box r1 slotted & drilled rotors,axis pads 20 " donz genovese staggered toyo t1 proxies toms tower strut bar cnc aluminum frame stiffiner plates lux link remote start remote top 1/4 window mod phone hack & beat sonic nav overide lots of led bulbs lexus logo door projectors
i've never seen an easily integrated aftermarket stereo. some people have changed out the head unit, but they had to move the stock stereo to the trunk in order for the navigation to work. even then, it didn't look good in my opinion. you'd probably need to have a new face/molding custom built for it to look right.
i've never seen it disassembled, but it looks like you might be able to have a piece of brushed metal cut to match the stock face, but cover the cassette hole. maybe have a custom button made to replace the "tape" button too. "trunk monkey" would be my first choice.
I don't know about other people on here but I think some of us "older guys" like having a cassette player in the car. I had a bunch cassettes that never came out on CDs, by some obscure bands, and being able to listen to some of this music again for the first time in a few years is great. I was kinda excited when I was checking out my car in the showroom and saw that it had a cassette player in it LOL.
Some of the stuff I can listen again is mostly some of the 80s heavy metal bands like Fire Down Under album by Riot (and no I don't mean Quiet Riot), Lizzy Borden, Mcauley Schenker Group, RacerX, and some early Fates Warning, Vinnie Moore, David Chastain and Tony Macalpine and some other heavy guitar oriented metal music. Music most people have never heard of before I can listen to again because of having a cassette player in my car for the first time in many years is a good thing.
__________________
2005 SC 430 -Absolutely Red w/Black interior
18X8 ASA AR9 with red spoke inserts machined w/black accent rims, Bridgestone Potenza RE960 A/S Pole Postion tires 245/40ZR18
2003 ZR2 Blazer -traded for Lexus
1996 Blazer -traded for ZR2 Blazer
1985 GMC Jimmy -sold
1976 Trans Am -sold
I don't know about other people on here but I think some of us "older guys" like having a cassette player in the car. I had a bunch cassettes that never came out on CDs, by some obscure bands, and being able to listen to some of this music again for the first time in a few years is great. I was kinda excited when I was checking out my car in the showroom and saw that it had a cassette player in it LOL.
Some of the stuff I can listen again is mostly some of the 80s heavy metal bands like Fire Down Under album by Riot (and no I don't mean Quiet Riot), Lizzy Borden, Mcauley Schenker Group, RacerX, and some early Fates Warning, Vinnie Moore, David Chastain and Tony Macalpine and some other heavy guitar oriented metal music. Music most people have never heard of before I can listen to again because of having a cassette player in my car for the first time in many years is a good thing.
Check itunes. I looked and everything you named is on there. You can download the mp3s and join the new millennium
i've never seen it disassembled, but it looks like you might be able to have a piece of brushed metal cut to match the stock face, but cover the cassette hole. maybe have a custom button made to replace the "tape" button too. "trunk monkey" would be my first choice.
I was wondering about a replacement unit also. With the size of the OEM radio, I would think that an aftermarket with a video screen would be available that has NAV features in it also would be available. Since it costs around $300 to upgrade the NAV DVD and another $300 (or so) to add on extra audio or video sources to be able to play MP3s, it seems that it would be easier to replace it with an all in one unit. Then you just don't use the current NAV unit on the dash at all, unless you convert it to a DVD player. Has anyone researched for a decent all-in-one unit like that?
I agree. Although I have not played a cassette player in a car in quite a few years, I have found that the cassette insert is the best interface for iPod for those cars lacking a direct plug (which is fairly new). Those FM adapters are just not very good, and I have tried a few of them.
__________________
2002 SC430 Black/Ecru
First Edition (April 2001)
-----
2004 RX330 w Nav/ML
and Thundercloud Grill
I never really understood all the objections and negative comments about the archaic cassette-tape player in our radios. I'm not so old (42), yet I use the cassette player frequently. My old Grateful Dead tapes are too good to mothball, and they sound great in the ML deck. I also use an iPod, but I tend to only listen to it in my LX that has a hard-wire connect, since the FM-adapter I've used in my SC sounds like crap.
The cassette adapter is nice because it is fast, convenient, there is no installation required, and it can be moved from car to car. It probably does not provide the higher audio quality or remote control of an iPod provided by more sophisticated units, but for general use, and dollar for dollar, it is an excellent solution to the iPod problem. I'd love to have vais units in my cars, but the cost exceeds the benefits I would derive.
__________________
2002 SC430 Black/Ecru
First Edition (April 2001)
-----
2004 RX330 w Nav/ML
and Thundercloud Grill