pakled wrote:
I have a 15-year-old car, and the CD player is shot, so it's either listen to music and commercials (life's too short to listen to commercials...
so I'm still listening to (erm) stuff from the late 80s and early 90s...sigh.
Are you saying you still got a cassette deck? If so, cassette adapter is a life saver, only about 10ish dollars, good purchase, plug in anything with a headphone jack into it.
Otherwise, if you got any amount of cash at all, a new car head unit is a good purchase and it's honestly not hard to install those things. New car head units are sweet, the one I had in my Supra was 160watts max, so not too powerful, only $80, though. It had a built in HD radio tuner, SD card slot, flash drive slot, both for playing mp3s, line-in, and mp3 CD playback, too. I kinda sacrificed power a bit buying that head unit for the features it has, but it was worth the money easily, especially for the HD radio. Tons of extra stations on it, like one of the pop music stations in the area for example, has an entire station just for club music without commercials. The like, variety rock station here just has an entire station full of uninterrupted commercial free classic rock. Seriously, new tech like that is wonderful stuff. And mp3 CDs, flash drives, fun stuff.
If you get a car where an idiot cut the wires to the stock harness and you got no radio, it's harder, as you gotta go look up the wiring diagram online or futz with the wires yourself til you find power, ground, memory, and speaker wires, but yeah. Otherwise, you go to Walmart, spend $8 on an adapter so you don't have cut your stock wires up and you can put the stock radio back in the car when you sell it, and then just connect the colored wires on your radio to your harness.
For me, what I've done on a few cars for temporary radios, right, if you go to a junkyard, most of them will sell you a name brand cassette head unit for like no money. I bought my cassette Pioneer and JVC head units for about $7 each. Then get a cassette adapter, you got better sound quality than stock usually, for no money. Used, though, a CD deck without a line-in will be about $20-30 bucks.
Just saying, installing those things isn't magic or even terribly hard. No need for an "expert" to do it, and most "experts" are just silly cocky teenagers really.