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tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? #61339
05/22/08 12:08 AM
05/22/08 12:08 AM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 14,491
So. Burlington, Vt.
F
fast68plymouth Offline OP
I Live Here
fast68plymouth  Offline OP
I Live Here
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 14,491
So. Burlington, Vt.
how about some pics and details of what you're running for car audio in your classic Mopar.

i'm in the process of putting my heap back on the road, and while i enjoy the sound of a healthy V8 as much as anyone......i kind of like to have the stereo cranking if i'm going any distance at all.

what are you guys using, and how much hacking did you have to do to install it?


68 Satellite, 383 with stock 906’s, 3550lbs, 11.18@123
Dealer for Comp Cams/Indy Heads
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: fast68plymouth] #61340
05/22/08 12:46 AM
05/22/08 12:46 AM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 4,574
Upper Midwest
Black_Sheep Offline
master
Black_Sheep  Offline
master

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 4,574
Upper Midwest
Stock AM/8 Track with 3 speaker dash. The radio has been upgraded with an MP3 player jack and better speakers, the "system" sounds pretty good for what it is...


'69 Plymouth GTX
See you on the street...
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you usin [Re: Black_Sheep] #61341
05/22/08 01:24 AM
05/22/08 01:24 AM
Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 10,693
Surface of the Sun, AZ
Hotwheelsjr Offline
I Live Here
Hotwheelsjr  Offline
I Live Here

Joined: Nov 2003
Posts: 10,693
Surface of the Sun, AZ
Cherry bombs --


Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: Black_Sheep] #61342
05/22/08 02:06 AM
05/22/08 02:06 AM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 25,050
Texas
GoodysGotaCuda Offline
5.7L Hemi, 6spd
GoodysGotaCuda  Offline
5.7L Hemi, 6spd

Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 25,050
Texas
alpine stereo, ipod hookup, polk audio speakers. i need a little 8" woofer or something to round the sound out. but sounds good!

Makes the long runs go by faster, Dad likes going to the pretty far car shows. (far with 3.91s) 150mile round trip last time. 'least i had some tunes


1972 Barracuda - 5.7L Hemi, T56 Magnum 6spd - https://www.facebook.com/GoodysGotaHemi
2020 RAM 1500
[img]https://i.imgur.com/v9yezP9.jpg[/img]
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: GoodysGotaCuda] #61343
05/22/08 07:21 AM
05/22/08 07:21 AM
Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 720
Indiana
C
Cuda_Mike Offline
super stock
Cuda_Mike  Offline
super stock
C

Joined: Feb 2005
Posts: 720
Indiana
Original am/fm radio in my 69 GTX, I hardly ever use the tape or cd players in my modern vehicles, radio is all I need...

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: Cuda_Mike] #61344
05/22/08 11:10 AM
05/22/08 11:10 AM
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 18,678
Fresno, CA
Jim_Lusk Offline
I Live Here
Jim_Lusk  Offline
I Live Here

Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 18,678
Fresno, CA
Right now the tunes in my old Mopars is the radio on my workbench......... That's what happens when everything is apart.

My GTS has the stock AM radio and will probably stay that way. My son's Dart has a modern CD player hidden in the glovebox with decent speakers. I will probably do something similar in my Barracuda.

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: Jim_Lusk] #61345
05/22/08 11:35 AM
05/22/08 11:35 AM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,928
Canada
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RobR Offline
master
RobR  Offline
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Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,928
Canada
I never really listen to the tunes but I put some in for my son..(I'm too busy listening for parts falling off)



Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: RobR] #61346
05/22/08 11:47 AM
05/22/08 11:47 AM
Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 858
Oklahoma
silverfish Offline
super stock
silverfish  Offline
super stock

Joined: Nov 2006
Posts: 858
Oklahoma
Quote:

I never really listen to the tunes but I put some in for my son..(I'm too busy listening for parts falling off)








Is it just me or is something missing in this picture just to the right of the brake pedal???

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: silverfish] #61347
05/22/08 12:02 PM
05/22/08 12:02 PM
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 3,358
Berwyn, IL
challenger70 Offline
master
challenger70  Offline
master

Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 3,358
Berwyn, IL
Quote:

I never really listen to the tunes but I put some in for my son..(I'm too busy listening for parts falling off)






I have an Eclipse head unit with Boston Acoustics speakers (3.5" in factory location and factory grilles) on the dash and 6x9 in the package tray. 2 Rockford Fosgate amps one for the sub one for the interior speakers and a JL Audio 10" Sub in the trunk. From inside/outside all you can see that is out of norm is the little red "Boston" on the speakers through the grills(if you really look) and the aftermarket head unit in the factory spot. But turn it on and it sounds unbelievable for a 40 year old dodge and puts most new cars to shame.

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you usin [Re: Hotwheelsjr] #61348
05/22/08 12:07 PM
05/22/08 12:07 PM
Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 484
PORT ALBERNI B.C. CANADA
71DemonRON Offline
mopar
71DemonRON  Offline
mopar

Joined: Jan 2008
Posts: 484
PORT ALBERNI B.C. CANADA
Quote:

Cherry bombs --





Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: silverfish] #61349
05/22/08 12:16 PM
05/22/08 12:16 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,928
Canada
R
RobR Offline
master
RobR  Offline
master
R

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,928
Canada
Quote:




Is it just me or is something missing in this picture just to the right of the brake pedal???




For some unknown reason my orig gas pedal wore out and broke I scored a new NOS pedal with the decor trim and I don't have the matching brake and clutch to go with it so I didn't put it in...

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: RobR] #61350
05/22/08 12:23 PM
05/22/08 12:23 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 27,421
Balt. Md
3
383man Offline
Too Many Posts
383man  Offline
Too Many Posts
3

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 27,421
Balt. Md
I have an aftermarket radio that fit perfect right in the stock location. Thats all I would use as I wont cut on my dash. If you look real close you might see it. Look at the steering wheel center cap and then look just to the right of it and thats my radio. Hey it works and I can listen to my oldies while I cruise. Ron


Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you usin [Re: fast68plymouth] #61351
05/22/08 01:02 PM
05/22/08 01:02 PM
Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 871
WA 98043
thecarfarmer Offline
super stock
thecarfarmer  Offline
super stock

Joined: Apr 2007
Posts: 871
WA 98043
A buddy of mine had a stock AM in his '66 Coronet 500 with an FM convertor stashed in the glovebox. Worked for him.

For my pickup ('54), I've got a bunch of pretty good stuff (that's several years out-of-date, but was high end at the time).

Eclipse 5303 head unit for the glovebox (which works okay since the glovebox is in the middle of the dash, and the head unit comes w/ a remote).

I also have an old 10" MTX sub that I may try to make an under-seat enclosure for, or just upgrade to a newer style subwoofer with a lower 'q' factor that works in a small box, depending on whether I can get a big enough box stuffed under there.

I'll re-use my Aura component drivers. Best sound I could find (at the time) in the under-$1K speaker market - and I listened to the Diamond, Quart, etc. offerings.

Unfortunately, (due to theft) I don't have my 3 way 24 dB crosssover; I'll have to get another crossover - I'm a big fan of separate amps for tweeters and mids.

Advice: spend as much as you can afford on the mid and tweeter speaker drivers - they're where the magic is. If you go for coaxials, ones that have an aim-able tweeter are preferable. If they aren't set up to be bi-amped, cut the leads off the tweeters, and put some separate leads on 'em so you can run them from a separate amp. Subs aren't such a critical item - they've received SO much R&D over the last fifteen years that even relatively cheap ones are pretty good. A single 10" or 12" is usually sufficient for musical reproduction (and even moderately high-power BOOM) in a typical '60's sedan). Since I got out of the scene a few years ago, there's been a lot of work spent on getting a lot of sound out of a small speaker enclosure (one that won't eat your trunk).

Most passive crossover sets (ones between amp and speaker) are CHEAP, and most tweeters are crossed over at too low a frequency; this leads to 'spitty' vocals (especially female voices) at higher volumes) - active (between the source and the amps) crossovers and separate amps solve a lot of this.

Subwoofers are really important to musical reproduction. A lot of kids go overboard on them, and neglect the rest of the equation (BOOM, BOOM, BOOM, while the licence plate frame and trunk lid buzz...). One of the best - and many of the worst - sub setups I've heard were 'bandpass' subs. Off-the-shelf stuff is basically hit-or-miss here; usually the latter. Bandpass boxes should be custom tailored to the sub and car. A musclecar-era car is a great candidate for one, however, since there are often speaker cutouts in the parcel deck under the rear window where the sound can come thru. For myself, I'd build an enclosure onto the bottom of the package deck to mound a sub in a BP box to feed thru there. It'd save some trunk space; you'd hardly see it with the trunk open - but just a single driver tucked up towards the front of the trunk will suffice, as long as you have speaker grills in the package deck to allow the sound in.

Buy amps bigger than you need (i.e. 60-100 watts per channel for speakers that you'll run at 30-50 watts); turn the gain down a little, and you'll have tons of headroom. Also, you don't need high-end amps for casual listening. The little tiny bit of sonic nuance you'll pick up by going to a high end amplifier will be lost as soon as you fire the car's engine (ask how I know).

Buy a head unit based on features you like; they all have CD drives and tuner packs that are way better than you'll need - any $100 name brand unit is going to be fine. Go shopping at the stereo store and pick which one you'll like to use.

Also, unless you're running a really big bass amp, I wouldn't run out and put stiffening caps on its input. Any decent quality speaker wire and power wire should suffice - there is VERY little to be gained there other than making sure the conductors are sized appropriately to the power load.

Probably a little "TMI" for your question; if so, here's what I'd leave you with: Allocate half the budget to your speakers; choose a radio based on the features you like.

Good references: Car Stereo Review Magazine, crutchfield.com

-bill


Seduce the attractive, and charm the rest. ****** 489 C.I.D., roller cam, aftermarket heads, tunnel ram, stock '54 Dodge rear axle assembly: which of these doesn't belong?
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: RobR] #61352
05/22/08 02:38 PM
05/22/08 02:38 PM
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 3,358
Berwyn, IL
challenger70 Offline
master
challenger70  Offline
master

Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 3,358
Berwyn, IL
Quote:

I never really listen to the tunes but I put some in for my son..(I'm too busy listening for parts falling off)







What mounting points did you use for the amp you mounted on the rear sear brace? Factory holes or did you drill? I had the same idea for my Challenger but there wasn't quite enough room to get at it easily. I plan on doing that once I get to that point with the Charger though. Nice clean install.

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: challenger70] #61353
05/22/08 04:48 PM
05/22/08 04:48 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,679
Va. Beach, Va
69superbee383 Offline
master
69superbee383  Offline
master

Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 6,679
Va. Beach, Va
Factory AM radio with a Realistic FM converter old school


77 Macho Power Wagon LWB factory 440 70 Coronet 440 N code 3 speed
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: 69superbee383] #61354
05/22/08 06:50 PM
05/22/08 06:50 PM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 5,118
Alone in the darkness
gamagoat6x6 Offline
super street
gamagoat6x6  Offline
super street

Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 5,118
Alone in the darkness
Stock AM/FM/reverb/fader with upgraded speakers.


`02 RAM2500 SPORT V10 4x4 `06 GMC sierra NO cars
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: gamagoat6x6] #61355
05/22/08 07:19 PM
05/22/08 07:19 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 6,743
central new york
pettyblue440 Offline
master
pettyblue440  Offline
master

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 6,743
central new york
I had member bigmoneylewis restore an am radio for my challenger for a great price. I also have a fm converter that is going under the dash. Wish I knew at the time he could ad a mp3 player jack to it, I would've had that done too.

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you using? [Re: fast68plymouth] #61356
05/22/08 07:57 PM
05/22/08 07:57 PM
Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 3,387
Toronto, ON
Shakey Offline
master
Shakey  Offline
master

Joined: Dec 2004
Posts: 3,387
Toronto, ON

Turnswitch took my AM radio, added an FM tuner and an MP3 jack without changing the stock look.


1969 Dodge Charger R/T SE - 440 AUTO
Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you usin [Re: Shakey] #61357
05/22/08 08:06 PM
05/22/08 08:06 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,192
M
MoreParts Offline
super stock
MoreParts  Offline
super stock
M

Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 1,192
I have an AM 8-Track too. I have the old FM Converter cartridge but it doesn't work too well. My favorite trick is recording my CD's to 8-Track and popping them in when I want some more modern tunes. It sounds great and makes people scratch their head when they hear something new coming from an 8 Track cartridge.

Re: tunes in your vintage Mopar.......what are you usin [Re: MoreParts] #61358
05/22/08 08:47 PM
05/22/08 08:47 PM
Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,672
Virginia
HemiStan Offline
top fuel
HemiStan  Offline
top fuel

Joined: Jun 2004
Posts: 1,672
Virginia
An aluminum headed 340 and a tunnel rammed Hemi are all I care to listen to.

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