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verify all wire colors and diagrams before applying any information.






i was an installer when this head unit first came out, and i put it in my car the day it was released. you are correct in that it has NO inputs. i believe that the CVA-1000 paved the way for all of the head units today. it was way ahead of its time...
that said, there is a way to add video (although, i cant help you 100%). i did it successfully, but it was so long ago that i cant remember wire colors.
what i did was i took a home vcr with video input and output RCA jacks (i used a power converter too, hardwired to my car). i hacked into the thick cable that runs from the brain the to dash unit. this cable contains the video wires. you cut the two wires and hardwire it to the RCAs. the end that leads back to the brain goes to the RCA video input on the VCR, and the end of the wire that goes to the dash unit gets hardwired to an RCA and that gets plugged into the video out of the VCR. now, when you arent using the VCR the video from the brain passes through it and goes to the display. when you want to watch a movie the VCR interupts the video source from the brain and sends its own video to the monitor. also, if the VCR has a few inputs you can add a playstation, dvd player, etc.
note: this was in the late 90s before DVDs were popular. you could probably sustitute the VCR for a DVD player that has video passthrough and a few extra inputs.
anyways, thats how its done, and i can attest that it works perfectly. i did mine myself. however, now you must do the footwork to find which wire colors inside the thick wire are the video.
you just take a razor and carefully strip back the black shielding on the thick wire. it will expose about 10 to 20 small wires of all different colors.
good luck!