Make its text the same color as the forum background.How is it that members still don’t see it’s altered profile and believe everything it says lol… trying to think of another way to get the point across not to trust it.
Not even sure if that would work lolMake its text the same color as the forum background.![]()
Well that does help at least, now you know the ground, 12v+ and ACC wire, so you can power the stereo on.You only need to disassemble the whole unitView attachment 62350
Well I couldn't find my multimeter, so I made a test light and this is what I found out...Well that does help at least, now you know the ground, 12v+ and ACC wire, so you can power the stereo on.
I was typing a response telling how to use that big diode and inductor / ohm meter to find the 12v wire, but being printed on the board makes no need for that. At any rate, once you get it powered on, a volt meter will be handy to find the power antenna and remote turn on wires (12v output when stereo / radio on), and then can carefully try to test for AC output for speaker wires playing a music / test tone if available. Or find the chip-amp IC and see if you can find its part number to see its pin-out, then follow the speaker outputs to the correct pins, it's already pretty far disassembled.
I might have found the issueWell I couldn't find my multimeter, so I made a test light and this is what I found out...
View attachment 62356
So there are 11 grounds... and If I connect one wire from the light to the "BATT-" labeled solder point on the board and connect the other to one of the pins I marked with a blue minus which are the grounds, something clicks on the board, and the bulb lights up slowly...
And If I connect one wire to the "BATT+" and the other wire to the "BATT-" the light turns on so I guess there is a short somewhere...
I got it to turn on, and so far everything is working, but I can't get the TV screen to stay open... If I press the "open" button, the screen comes out and turns on but for only 2 seconds, then closes on it's own.But yes, if you were to try to power it up, these are the 3 pins you want as far as I can tell. The 12v+ and ACC both connect to the battery 12v+ terminal for testing purposes, and ground of course to battery negative. This should allow it to fully power on. The other pins being tied to ground may be from a bad output chip, but might not know until you test it, and perhaps the light bulb tester is making the circuit act unusual, not sure.
View attachment 62368