Bypass 'premium' amp in boot.. 6 wires?
Posted: Sun Mar 25, 2018 8:19 pm
Hi, I have a 1989 325iC. I just spent an evening trying to wire in a "Continental" branded headunit in an attempt to keep a nice older looking facia, but getting USB and Bluetooth.
FM-AM-Radio-with-USB-Bluetooth
https://www.continental-automotive.com/ ... -Bluetooth
I eventually untangled previous bodgery (so I could add my own) and was happy to not have to deal with the fader switch. (Not present)
But I got no sound out of the speakers until I reconnected the mysterious white wire that had been wired into the switched 12v. I thought it was for the antenna (which is stuck, so I didn't bother reconnecting it) but it turns out it was for the amplifier bolted in the boot. Never realized there was one.
So it seems the speaker outputs from the head unit are going into the amp, and it sounds cack at anything over 10% volume.
Some searching showed that it can all be bypassed, but the only advice I could find seemed to relate to a set-up that had different wiring than mine.
This link gives a simple guide on which wires to match up:
https://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showth ... p?t=191119
but I don't have all those..
Of the list:
Aftermarket-----------Dash Wires-----------Speaker Wires
RF+ Grey--------------Blue/Red-------------Grey/White
RF- Grey/Black--------Brown/Orange--------Grey/Brown
LF+ White------------Yellow/Red------------Grey/Red
LF- White/Black-------Brown/Orange--------Grey/Violet
RR+ Violet------------Blue/Black------------Black/White
RR- Violet/Black-------Brown/Orange--------Black/Brown
LR+ Green------------Yellow/Black----------Black/Red
LR- Green/Black-------Brown/Orange--------Black/Violet
(I have the wires in bold, but not the italics..)
I've then got a red/white, red/black, white (I guess the amp signal to switch on) and brown.
The implication is that somewhere between the head unit (where each speaker had it's own dedicated -ve) and the rear of the car, all the -ve wires got combined to one common -ve?
Rather than cut the plug off in the boot (and then be forced to do a bunch of soldering bent over in a confined space), I cut the old amp apart and thought I'd hack out the piece that the harness plugs into and solder the jumpers needed onto the back..
https://get.google.com/albumarchive/106 ... y-r0ntXaNA
Sorry, don't get how to embed the image.
So do I just join all the speaker -ve wires to the one earth? Brown?
Any Idea what the red/white was for?
Thanks,
Neil.
FM-AM-Radio-with-USB-Bluetooth
https://www.continental-automotive.com/ ... -Bluetooth
I eventually untangled previous bodgery (so I could add my own) and was happy to not have to deal with the fader switch. (Not present)
But I got no sound out of the speakers until I reconnected the mysterious white wire that had been wired into the switched 12v. I thought it was for the antenna (which is stuck, so I didn't bother reconnecting it) but it turns out it was for the amplifier bolted in the boot. Never realized there was one.
So it seems the speaker outputs from the head unit are going into the amp, and it sounds cack at anything over 10% volume.
Some searching showed that it can all be bypassed, but the only advice I could find seemed to relate to a set-up that had different wiring than mine.
This link gives a simple guide on which wires to match up:
https://www.r3vlimited.com/board/showth ... p?t=191119
but I don't have all those..
Of the list:
Aftermarket-----------Dash Wires-----------Speaker Wires
RF+ Grey--------------Blue/Red-------------Grey/White
RF- Grey/Black--------Brown/Orange--------Grey/Brown
LF+ White------------Yellow/Red------------Grey/Red
LF- White/Black-------Brown/Orange--------Grey/Violet
RR+ Violet------------Blue/Black------------Black/White
RR- Violet/Black-------Brown/Orange--------Black/Brown
LR+ Green------------Yellow/Black----------Black/Red
LR- Green/Black-------Brown/Orange--------Black/Violet
(I have the wires in bold, but not the italics..)
I've then got a red/white, red/black, white (I guess the amp signal to switch on) and brown.
The implication is that somewhere between the head unit (where each speaker had it's own dedicated -ve) and the rear of the car, all the -ve wires got combined to one common -ve?
Rather than cut the plug off in the boot (and then be forced to do a bunch of soldering bent over in a confined space), I cut the old amp apart and thought I'd hack out the piece that the harness plugs into and solder the jumpers needed onto the back..
https://get.google.com/albumarchive/106 ... y-r0ntXaNA
Sorry, don't get how to embed the image.
So do I just join all the speaker -ve wires to the one earth? Brown?
Any Idea what the red/white was for?
Thanks,
Neil.