Poor Man's Aux input
All the necessary signals are located on the center connector on the back of the radio. This is the external CD changer port (5+7 connector). Currently only two wires occupy that space on the <2005 models. These are the IEBUS signals that goes on to the Navigation ECU. You will want to keep that connected.
So, anyway, you pick up a Y cable for about $12
You can either plug the original cable into one end of the connector and cut off the other for the wiring, or cut off both connectors and just wire those IEBUS pins tothe single connector. Either way, we are not monkeying with those signals.
And an 3.5mm audio extension cable. Cut off one end (whether you want a female or male connector)
Usually you will find red, white, and a braided shield or black wire. The red is right audio, white is left audio, and the black or braided wire is your signal grounds (L-/R-)
All you want to do is connect your audio device L/R audio signal to the R+/L+ pins and their shields to the L-/R- pins. If you want to wire in a pre-amp (because a headphone output is not very strong) you even have the ACC line on this connector to get 12V
Now you simply tune to an empty AM channel. Even though there will be some static, your audio will override it and the radio will filter the static out.
Since the radio thinks you are on a radio station, the volume, bass, etc... controls still work. The disadvantage is that the radio goes up, of course.
You can do this also in tape mode, but at least on mine if there is no audio on the tape, the radio will eject it. CD mode could work if you made a CD with silence.
Certainly not the most elegant solution, but you can get Aux on your radio for about $15. No modding to your radio or wiring, and you can just pull it back out and return to normal.
If the above is not self-explanatory, let me know.
Question: When adding an input using the adapter sold by VAIS Technology, the music source shows up as a new mode, "CD1" Is that something that could be achieved using your plan?
With the poor man's mod, your radio is not aware of any external input and that is why you need to chose a mode with silence. The volume and everything works to control the amp, you are simply mixing your audio on top of the radio/CD/Tape, etc... which, if silent, means only your audio.
If all you want is an AUX input on your radio, this will do the trick.
I actually have all the parts to do this (actually, I have tested it already informally and it works great), and I need an aux input to hold me over until I finish the CarPC, so I am planning to put together some photo instructions hopefully later today.
Last edited by Retroplay; May 7, 2016 at 06:46 AM.
No need to take apart the radio for the mod I proposed.
Last edited by Retroplay; May 7, 2016 at 08:00 AM.
I circled where the connector is. I removed the pins on mine a while back.
It's really not all that scary to take that cover off if you prefer that route. There is no advantage or disadvantage to doing it either way, though. Same result.
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All this does is impedance match the output of the headphone jack for maximum power transfer.
This allows your cassette player to interface with the music on your phone.
I am not sure how it would work with the Built in Hands Free Phone system in the car, but I suspect there is maybe a setting on your phone that would let you select which Bluetooth does what.
Well, technically, I bought the USB version that could play MP3s off from a flash drive, but it is really the same thing as this one (the board inside has layout variations for different types.)
This allows your cassette player to interface with the music on your phone.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00...VXR06MW1WK6JKC
I am not sure how it would work with the Built in Hands Free Phone system in the car, but I suspect there is maybe a setting on your phone that would let you select which Bluetooth does what.
Battery life wasn't great, so I purchased a spare one that i keep charged in the lower console.
Hope that helps,









