FAQ
How do I switch between inputs on this installation? It sounds complicated. It is really very simple - it is much harder to describe than to do. For illustration purposes, we will
pretend you last listened to AM radio when you turned the oem stereo off.
1. AM - Press the left (power) button on your oem stereo to turn the stereo on, just like always. AM is still selected since that was what you last listened to.
2. FM - Press the right button once on your oem stereo to switch to FM, just like always.
3. XM - Press the right button on your oem stereo once to switch to CD mode, then select CD 6 using the "program" button on the oem stereo (just like always). If your XM receiver is turned on, you will hear XM through your oem car stereo.
4. iPod - Pressing the "program" button once(the oem stereo is still set to CD) will change from "CD 6" (which is not really a CD anymore, it is now XM) to "CD 1" (which is not really a CD anymore either, it is now a playlist) allowing you to listen to playlist 1 on your iPod. Press "program" on the oem stereo again to listen to playlist 2, and so forth for each playlist until you come to "CD 6", which is XM again.
What buttons do I have to press on the iPod? If you have installed the USA-SPEC PA11-HON, none of them. The PA-11 provides total control over the iPod through the oem stereo. Since the PA-11 HON charges the iPod, you have the iPod locked away in the glovebox for safekeeping, and won't have to touch it at all.
How do I get back to regular radio? Press the right button on your oem stereo once (just like always) to get back to AM, press again to get back to FM (just like always).
So when I select CD on my car stereo, it really isn't for CDs anymore, CD mode has been "converted" to XM/iPod? Then I just switch back to AM or FM anytime by pressing the same button on the oem stereo I always pressed? Exactly
What should I do with my CD player? Remove it, along with the CD player mount, and sell them as a pair on NSXPrime or eBay. Or store them with your beloved cassette deck, turntable, Bose 901 speakers, 8-track player, and reel-to-reel in the basement. Leave the cable tucked away in the right side of the trunk.
What if I don't want satellite radio? Not a problem. Delete the XM installation entirely and just connect an iPod plus
any other sound device that can be connected with an RCA adapter cable (just about anything) to the PA11-HON. Using a reel-to-reel player (remember those?) as an extreme example, install the reel-to-reel in the trunk, power it with a DC converter, then use an RCA to RCA cable to connect the sound output of the reel-to-reel to the RCA side of the PA11-HON. Now you can listen to the reel-to-reel on "CD 6". Or using a cellphone as a reasonable example, you only need two cables to connect a cellphone to the RCA side of the PA11-HON. Get
one cable with one end that plugs into the sound output of your particular cell phone, and the other end that has a 3.5mm female plug. Then get a
3.5mm to RCA cable to connect to the PA11-HON. Simply connect the two cables together to hook up the cell phone. Select CD 6 on your oem stereo and you are all set to listen to your cellphone.
Can I take and make "hands-free" phone calls with this setup? Uh, I don't know. I don't see any reason why you couldn't, but I haven't tried it myself and am not sure that it would be practical, so I don't want to say without actually trying it. I intend to test this out though. Stay tuned.