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What Type of Alpine Connector is This?
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<blockquote data-quote="youdoofus" data-source="post: 8665219" data-attributes="member: 664079"><p>thats the alpine proprietary AI-Net plug. They used 2 types of connectors back in the day, AI-Net and M-Bus, this is the former. It was for cd changer controls, ipod connectivity etc before the widespread advent of USB in cars.</p><p></p><p>I was out of the audio scene for several years, so i dont know when Alpine ditched AI-Net, but im about 99% sure they did indeed ditch it.</p><p></p><p>The IMPRINT unit is a nice external processor (for its time), and whoever had that stuff before you spent a pretty penny on it.</p><p></p><p>The best way to handle it is to just go RCAs to the deck and rely on its internal processor or get a DSP. If youre wanting to run more than 2 channels of amplification, youre going to want a better deck than one with just one red and one white</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="youdoofus, post: 8665219, member: 664079"] thats the alpine proprietary AI-Net plug. They used 2 types of connectors back in the day, AI-Net and M-Bus, this is the former. It was for cd changer controls, ipod connectivity etc before the widespread advent of USB in cars. I was out of the audio scene for several years, so i dont know when Alpine ditched AI-Net, but im about 99% sure they did indeed ditch it. The IMPRINT unit is a nice external processor (for its time), and whoever had that stuff before you spent a pretty penny on it. The best way to handle it is to just go RCAs to the deck and rely on its internal processor or get a DSP. If youre wanting to run more than 2 channels of amplification, youre going to want a better deck than one with just one red and one white [/QUOTE]
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What Type of Alpine Connector is This?
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