depends on the car
personally i'd spend the extra $$$ on a longer rca cable and find the wires behind the radio, rather than digging around in the trunk for them. there are a few cars where that's not an option though... some cars have factory amplified systems and they really don't respond well to line level converters (at least not the cheap ones that most people use).
2007-05-15 23:02:13
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answer #1
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answered by duholt 2
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That's easy to do, it shouldn't take much time. The first thing to do is connect the speakers wires OF THE RADIO (LF,RF) or if you have rear speakers (LR, RR) to the converter speakers wires (Those are the input of the converter). Then conect the RCA wires (ouput of converter) to the RCA wires that will be connected to the amp. Now what is left to do is connect the ground wire of the converter to the chasis or the radio's ground wire. That should do the trick. That happened to me just 2 weeks ago, and now everything is allright.
2007-05-16 03:01:11
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answer #2
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answered by Mitchell 5
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the respond above is physically powerful, yet at the back of the radio isn't the excellent place. in the adventure that your going to be working the line out from the Rear audio gadget then working RCAs to the trunk then the logical area to place in the line out is indoors the trunk of the motorized motor vehicle. Will make the finished technique a lot much less perplexing. Hook up the + and - to the excellent twine to the rear audio gadget plug your RCAs in and enjoy.
2016-12-11 10:42:20
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answer #3
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answered by mcarthur 4
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How many times are you going to ask this question? It's already been answered for you twice. If you're not getting the answer you're looking for, try asking a more detailed question.
2007-05-15 16:44:42
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answer #4
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answered by KaeZoo 7
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