hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Includes wiring and battery, generating system, starting system,
ignition system, windscreen wipers, lighting system and instruments and gauges.

Moderators: reidy, Blacky

Post Reply
mattymartin
Posts: 841
Joined: Fri Oct 06, 2006 12:49 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: sydney

hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by mattymartin »

hey guys,

has anyone that isnt a auto electrician or sound specialist hooked up their stereo in the car before...
if so, which im sure it is... could you please give m some pointers before i get into a world of pain...

do i have to put wires down before carpet goes down, or can i get away with doing it after the carpet goes in ...

ps, my wagon is at the trimmers & was supposed to be finished last week but carpet still hasn"t arrived. i was hoping to get it to all holden day, but not going to happen now...

thanks
matty martin
go the wagons....
Brown Bear
Posts: 412
Joined: Tue May 24, 2005 3:00 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: Clarence Town, NSW

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by Brown Bear »

Matty!! great to see you back in town! :D

It's not difficult to wire up a stereo, just depends on how complex your system is and how good you are at joining cables.
A basic head unit usually has 1 earth lead, 1 constant power (batt), and 1 Switched power (ignition), then 2 cables per speaker. In a wagon, you can usually you can get away with running the speaker wires under the door scuff plates, then behind the wheel arch trim to the cargo bay where a pair of 6x9's will fit nicely.

If you're going for a bigger doof doof system, there's more than likely to be someone on here who has done it already and can give you a few pointers :wink:

Looking forward to seeing your wagon all done!

Matt
On safari

Member of FB EK Holden Car Club of NSW Inc.
User avatar
Harv
Posts: 5227
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 2:00 pm
State: NSW
Location: Sydney, Australia

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by Harv »

Matty,

Give it a go - it's not that hard. Some thoughts that may help:
a) Be careful where you run the two power leads as they come over from the fuse panel to the stereo - don't get them caught in pedal return springs, wiper arms or any other sharp edges. Cable tie them in place so they don't move around.
b) Put grommets anywhere a wire goes through body metal (aerial probably will be the only place) to stop water getting in and sharp esgdes cutting cables.
c) You'll probably use crimp connections - don't use the thin sheet steel "Supercheap" crimper - go to a Tandy/JayCar/DSE and get a ratcheting crimper. They cost about $35, but work a bazzilion times better than the thin ones, and are a tool you will use many times over the years.
d) Run some heat shrink over the terminal ends - looks neater and gives some mechanical strength when you plug/unplug them over the years.
e) Practice crimping and heat shrinking on some scrap cables before you start with the car.
f) Run the cables under scuff plates, tucking under the carpet edge.
g) Watch the +ve and -ve leads are on right (the cable will have a stripe on one wire).
h) Rear quarter panels in a wagon work great for speakers, but plan on running grille covers on them (your shopping bags will inevitably roll across the wagon floor and smoosh any exposed speaker cone :oops: ). Speakers here will need support - check your trimmer is using thick enough panels to mount a speaker on.
327 Chev EK wagon, original EK ute for Number 1 Daughter, an FB sedan meth monster project and a BB/MD grey motored FED.
matches
Posts: 870
Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 6:08 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: port macquarie, nsw

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by matches »

Harv wrote:Matty,

Give it a go - it's not that hard. Some thoughts that may help:
c) You'll probably use crimp connections - don't use the thin sheet steel "Supercheap" crimper - go to a Tandy/JayCar/DSE and get a ratcheting crimper. They cost about $35, but work a bazzilion times better than the thin ones, and are a tool you will use many times over the years.
solder the wires into the conections if your going to use male/ female connectors. after a bit of connect- disconnect they can work their way out. if your not worried and have a pair of sidecutters :wink: just solder the wires directly and you'll have a true connection with no loss of signal (which will cause crackling in your speakers :evil: ) you could get the trimmer to just lay 4 speaker wires under the carpet and out where your going to put your speakers and you can worry about hooking them up after you get it back.
User avatar
Devilrod
Posts: 7394
Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 12:55 pm
State: VIC
Location: Beaconsfield, Vic

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by Devilrod »

After some of the other things you've done Matty I think you could do this really easily. Nothing more than what has been said above two power (constant for memory and accessories these can be the same source but run through a fuse) and an earth. Run speaker wires under scuff plates and your done! Mine is wired up to be always on, straight from the battery via a fuse.
Speed and Style........... One day I'll get the speed bit.
basic.green
Posts: 367
Joined: Wed Sep 19, 2007 2:31 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: adelaide.sa.

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by basic.green »

my to cents
put some rca wires in so down the track you can put a amp in. these are quite big so put them under the carpet now
and dose not hert to put a extra wire in under the carpet just in case. i have and now i am glad i did :mrgreen:
building the dream Rick
User avatar
(AUST)Mod
Posts: 2272
Joined: Sun May 07, 2006 11:16 pm
State: WA
Location: Perth

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by (AUST)Mod »

Run speaker cables and RCA cables on the opposite side to the amp power cable.
Craig wrote: Andrew you have a red so I wouldn't race it :wink:

Image
parisian62
Posts: 3996
Joined: Wed May 11, 2005 2:19 pm
State: NSW
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by parisian62 »

matty martin...and here I was thinking you'd fallen off the face of the earth... :D :lol:
Matty!! great to see you back in town!
my thoughts too Matthew.

Havn't you finished that wagon yet MM???... :D

great post I'll need some help ont this subject too. In addition to Harv's suggestion on the placement of rear wagon speakers I've seen some mounted behind the rear quarters so they are not actualy mounte don the trim piece. You need to get some steel folded up to do this and then either spot welded, pop riveted inside the quarter.

Stewart
Feelin free in a '61 FB.
Member of FB-EK Holden Car Club Of NSW Inc.
Check out the Rebuild of Old Timer
User avatar
Sputzwagon
Posts: 2708
Joined: Fri Dec 07, 2007 6:27 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: Termeil, South Coast NSW

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by Sputzwagon »

Matty...MAATE...
Good to hear from you...
I tend to be a bit 'old school' when it comes to wiring anything...
I tin each & every wire before I use connectors & then add solder inside the connectors and heat 'em up to join the wire BEFORE I crimp them together.
This way they have a perfect connection and never fall out or get pulled out. :wink:
As for adding before carpet...it's no necessary as all you have to do is unscrew the scuff plates and lift the carpet a bit to shove the speaker wire underneath. :D

Scotty.
[img]http://i249.photobucket.com/albums/gg211/scottyharrod/WOOFTOsmall.jpg[/img]
Woofto Car Club Member No 2
User avatar
Ed
Posts: 190
Joined: Tue Jul 12, 2005 3:15 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: Malabar

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by Ed »

Hey Matty,

Yeah put the wires down before carpet and as mentioned run your RCAS on the opposite side to power to avoid electrical noise. Plan where to put all your components and lay out your wiring then put it all in place.

I would also lay down some dynamat to reduce noise and panel drumming.

here are some pics of my old wagon install.

I had all amps under the rear floor, on a rack.
Image

then I split the head unit and put the face in the armrest for a stealth install.
Image

made some speaker pods
Image

Image

Cheers

Ed
FE/FC Holden Car Club of NSW
mattymartin
Posts: 841
Joined: Fri Oct 06, 2006 12:49 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: sydney

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by mattymartin »

Please forgive my EXTREMELY LATE reply,
Thank you to such well explained & detailed replies


I now have some time over next weekend to put into the stereo, hence
That I have reread all the helpful hint given above...

But I have just realized that the stereo is to big for the hole in the dash
I know some of you have put one in this spot, so some advice on how you got it in
There would be greatly appreciated...

(I dont want it in the glovebox)


Please help
MattyMartin
go the wagons....
User avatar
Devilrod
Posts: 7394
Joined: Fri Apr 30, 2004 12:55 pm
State: VIC
Location: Beaconsfield, Vic

Post by Devilrod »

Unfortunately without hacking up the dash it won't fit. Which is why quote often they are in the glovebox. Other option is to get an under dash bracket. Or get really creative like ed did.
mattymartin
Posts: 841
Joined: Fri Oct 06, 2006 12:49 pm
State: NOT ENTERED
Location: sydney

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by mattymartin »

Hey DR,

Thanks for the reply mate, I'm ok with cutting up dash
As long as I don't loose the design lines...

Under dash bracket I find them UGLY, but that's just my thoughts
And we all know that beauty is in the eye of the beholder...

So I want it in that spot, but I held up the stereo to the area and it
Looks like it will stop me from opening the glovebox...


Thanks

Mattymartin
go the wagons....
User avatar
Harv
Posts: 5227
Joined: Mon Oct 08, 2007 2:00 pm
State: NSW
Location: Sydney, Australia

Re: hooking up a stereo yourself... is it hard????

Post by Harv »

Matty,

Your'e right, there's not much room above that glovebox, even if you cut the dash a bit. Some options:
a) mount the whole lot in the glovebox,
b) mount the radio on the floor under the front seat. Works, but not the nicest of locations - the horsehair from the front seat will drop onto it, and it is hard to access whilst driving (a radio with a remote can help, point it under the seat and most will still work),
c) mount the radio anywhere you like, detach the face (needs to be a detachable face radio), mount the "face" anywhere you like (Ed had his on an armrest, but the back of a sunvisor works OK too... maybe even the factory radio position would work as you don't have the lump of the radio to locate), then connect the two with PC ribbon cable (bit fiddly but not impossible).
d) make up a console for the front of the car - many have done it, it gives you a place to store your sunnies, but makes it harder to put three people on the front bench,
e) plenty of spare room in the wagon rear quarters behind the trim panels... bit odd having a radio in the back though.
f) ditch the radio, wind down the windows and listen to the grey :D

Just my 2c worth.
Cheers,
Harv
327 Chev EK wagon, original EK ute for Number 1 Daughter, an FB sedan meth monster project and a BB/MD grey motored FED.
Post Reply