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head unit install question

Printed From: the12volt.com
Forum Name: Car Audio
Forum Discription: Car Stereos, Amplifiers, Crossovers, Processors, Speakers, Subwoofers, etc.
URL: https://www.the12volt.com/installbay/forum_posts.asp?tid=26184
Printed Date: May 16, 2025 at 5:21 AM


Topic: head unit install question

Posted By: e30_318i
Subject: head unit install question
Date Posted: February 09, 2004 at 10:29 PM

i took my pioneer cd player head unit out of my corolla, because im trying to sell it.  i've been trying to install a cheap cd player in its place.

but when i got it going,  it overheated very quickly, to the point where a tiny amount of smoke came out of the head unit (!!).  The problem seems to be antenna cable, when that is disconnected the unit doesnt overheat.  this same problem happened on a daewoo head unit i tested.  the thing is, the daewoo unit never used to overheat like that.  the pioneer still runs okay - i think.

im pretty familiar with the car and i know the other wiring isnt at fault.  does anyone know what could be the problem?

i dont know how the antenna cable works, i assume it simply runs to the antenna itself and the head unit powers it to receive a signal?  could it be somehow drawing too much current?

thanks.




Replies:

Posted By: bobdigital
Date Posted: February 10, 2004 at 10:16 AM

hi,

when you switched the headunits, did you also switch the wiring harness?  You may  of had a head unit that had more power running to it then the previous one, or there is a possibility of a mis match in wires that were connected, or one of the wires may be damaged or slit open which would cause it to either spark or smoke.



-------------
bob




Posted By: sroth140
Date Posted: February 10, 2004 at 2:20 PM
check your ground.  if ts grounded poorly the deck will try to ground through the antenna, which usually has high resistance.  meter your switched and constant power wire through the ground wire, then meter them in referance to the chasis.  that will tell you if theres a ground problem, if the voltages are significantly different.  you could also ohm meter the ground wire to the chasis, or double check it is a gound by testing for continuity.  as a last check, see if the power antenna/amp turn on wires from the deck are touching anything.  if they are, and you dont have an amp or power antenna hooked up to them, they could be grounding out and shorting something in the deck.





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