Hi,
my name is Andreas, from Germany, a total noob, which means, I never did more than installing an aftermarket casseiver/cd-receiver. I have, superficial, electric hardware knowledge.
Since my car (Mitsubishi Carisma 1.6, 1997) has gotten old and may not be with me for very long, I decided, that I will use this car to learn more about cars, how to dampen/insulate them, how to install HiFi and whatever.
I am into "Fun-Only" or SQ, depending on budget ;-) My first build will be "Fun-Only".
This involves adding a 4-channel amplifier (Pioneer GM-A4704) for the 4x Philips OEM speakers that came with the car, because my current head unit, an early 2000's DENSION DH200ix CD receiver, does not play loud enough when at higher speeds. Later I may dampen.
The receiver is also head-unit to the matching DENSION DMP3 harddisk player (now running an SD-card-to-IDE adapter instead of the 3.5" harddisk). The HDD player is a container with a little headunit mounted to it. This means, the player also could be used stand-alone, which in fact first it was, since this was the first product, DENSION came up with. People would either mount the whole device somewhere below the glove compartment or behind the shifting stick. It had a little VFC display, a pushknob, a 3.5 line out jack and a DC-in, which meant, it could be unmounted from the car and used on its own. Later on they added the possibility to store it in an aluminium frame with cooling fins. That one can then be connected with a 5 meter cable, via the CD changer control port of the DH200ix CD-receiver or a separate control unit, that just looks like the one mounted to the hard disk container. It was possible to use this container as an exchangeable harddisk on your PC, sliding it in and out of the frame you would install to your PC's case. They even had a software, that would allow creation of complex playlists, including moods and whatever. The whole harddisk player, mounted in the alu-fin case, is about the size of a medium sized 1990's 2-channel amp.
They also produced a head-unit with a mount frame for a 2.5" harddisk. It made the DMP3 unit redundant. That device was called DH100ix.
DENSION was very successful, back in the day over here in EU and Mercedes bought them. Currently, as it seems, they are independent again.
Enough with the history!
The first I will do is adding aforementioned (or stronger, if not enough, it's 4 x 40W RMS) power-amp. Then I may do sound-dampening. I won't upgrade speakers, since I may get a new car in a not too distant future, which will mean a total change in the hardware anyway, including the head unit. I may go full DSP and three-way then.
It's late at night, so I can't shoot photos of the devices I mentioned,I will follow suit tomorrow by editing this post (photos in post below), if interested.
EDIT: Should have said something about the music I listen to, which is, practically, everything, as long it's got some soul, blood, sweat and tears, ranging from classical, hip-hop, heavy, rock'n'roll, rythm'n'blues, disco, punk, old-school industrial, electro, etc.
Have a good day!
my name is Andreas, from Germany, a total noob, which means, I never did more than installing an aftermarket casseiver/cd-receiver. I have, superficial, electric hardware knowledge.
Since my car (Mitsubishi Carisma 1.6, 1997) has gotten old and may not be with me for very long, I decided, that I will use this car to learn more about cars, how to dampen/insulate them, how to install HiFi and whatever.
I am into "Fun-Only" or SQ, depending on budget ;-) My first build will be "Fun-Only".
This involves adding a 4-channel amplifier (Pioneer GM-A4704) for the 4x Philips OEM speakers that came with the car, because my current head unit, an early 2000's DENSION DH200ix CD receiver, does not play loud enough when at higher speeds. Later I may dampen.
The receiver is also head-unit to the matching DENSION DMP3 harddisk player (now running an SD-card-to-IDE adapter instead of the 3.5" harddisk). The HDD player is a container with a little headunit mounted to it. This means, the player also could be used stand-alone, which in fact first it was, since this was the first product, DENSION came up with. People would either mount the whole device somewhere below the glove compartment or behind the shifting stick. It had a little VFC display, a pushknob, a 3.5 line out jack and a DC-in, which meant, it could be unmounted from the car and used on its own. Later on they added the possibility to store it in an aluminium frame with cooling fins. That one can then be connected with a 5 meter cable, via the CD changer control port of the DH200ix CD-receiver or a separate control unit, that just looks like the one mounted to the hard disk container. It was possible to use this container as an exchangeable harddisk on your PC, sliding it in and out of the frame you would install to your PC's case. They even had a software, that would allow creation of complex playlists, including moods and whatever. The whole harddisk player, mounted in the alu-fin case, is about the size of a medium sized 1990's 2-channel amp.
They also produced a head-unit with a mount frame for a 2.5" harddisk. It made the DMP3 unit redundant. That device was called DH100ix.
DENSION was very successful, back in the day over here in EU and Mercedes bought them. Currently, as it seems, they are independent again.
Enough with the history!
The first I will do is adding aforementioned (or stronger, if not enough, it's 4 x 40W RMS) power-amp. Then I may do sound-dampening. I won't upgrade speakers, since I may get a new car in a not too distant future, which will mean a total change in the hardware anyway, including the head unit. I may go full DSP and three-way then.
It's late at night, so I can't shoot photos of the devices I mentioned,
EDIT: Should have said something about the music I listen to, which is, practically, everything, as long it's got some soul, blood, sweat and tears, ranging from classical, hip-hop, heavy, rock'n'roll, rythm'n'blues, disco, punk, old-school industrial, electro, etc.
Have a good day!
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