Saturday, November 7, 2009

Installing A Cd Player On A Boat Installing Cd Player In A Boat?

Installing cd player in a boat? - installing a cd player on a boat

Hello guys. I have an old boat, which is currently an FM receiver / cassette him. I want to install an FM / CD player. What would drive. I've heard that I need the right cables, but you do not know what they are buying. I have never installed before by them. Can anyone help? I take all the advice you give. It seems that depends more son from the back of the cassette. Will they all live on the CD again?

3 comments:

KaeZoo said...

It might be easy, can be difficult.

You do not find an adapter harness, you must manually wiring. The colors of the Son in the cassette player must be the same as in the CD, unless the tape is very old. After a color cable industry standard was developed several years ago, but before that each manufacturer uses its own code.

Perhaps your tape player is an "axis" type, as is the case if you have found a volume knob and a knob on both sides of the cartridge slot. If it does, opening with the tape not the same size as that for the CD. You may have to do some trim.

In addition, an old cassette player a "common ground" speaker-cabling system, where each may have used with its own speakers (+)-cable, but all share a common (-) wires. If it 'is the case, is not compatible with a new CD drive, so you can make connections speakers differently. In the worst case, have to run new cable to each speaker.

Usually ships facilities are relatively simple, since the wiring is not too difficult to access. Be sure to make connections from moisture and corrosion, weld and cut the pipes is recommended.

KaeZoo said...

It might be easy, can be difficult.

You do not find an adapter harness, you must manually wiring. The colors of the Son in the cassette player must be the same as in the CD, unless the tape is very old. After a color cable industry standard was developed several years ago, but before that each manufacturer uses its own code.

Perhaps your tape player is an "axis" type, as is the case if you have found a volume knob and a knob on both sides of the cartridge slot. If it does, opening with the tape not the same size as that for the CD. You may have to do some trim.

In addition, an old cassette player a "common ground" speaker-cabling system, where each may have used with its own speakers (+)-cable, but all share a common (-) wires. If it 'is the case, is not compatible with a new CD drive, so you can make connections speakers differently. In the worst case, have to run new cable to each speaker.

Usually ships facilities are relatively simple, since the wiring is not too difficult to access. Be sure to make connections from moisture and corrosion, weld and cut the pipes is recommended.

Phillup McCrevas said...

The wiring harness adapters are commonly used in vehicles, so you can connect to the wall of the installation in touch. I've never heard that on a boat used. You can of course always the tape recorder and use the same cable to connect the CD player. It is likely that the band has the same color as the son of a CD player. Most importantly, the lines of the three branches are yellow, as a rule constant 12V battery +, red + on \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ to \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ \\ 12v dial black is ground. Once everything is connected, to ensure that on and off with the key, if not changed the yellow and red cables. The gray, are white, green and purple your speaker cables. They must match should be easy.

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