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Curious as to how much money is involved after its all said and done. I bought a reconditioned OEM CD player for my Silverado for $175 off of eBay. I haven't had any issues with it and it came with the auxiliary output attached too.
Okay so my fumbass didn't think about this before I ordered LEDs. So I'll return the ones I bought and buy ones with resistors built in.
So far $30 for bulbs and I need to go pick up a new soldering iron. The one I have is really crappy and not good for this projectCurious as to how much money is involved after its all said and done. I bought a reconditioned OEM CD player for my Silverado for $175 off of eBay. I haven't had any issues with it and it came with the auxiliary output attached too.
I ordered 3mm bulbs with built in resistors from LC LED Corp (I bought their sample of 15 bulbs for $30 shipped. I actually got it figured out as far as positive and negative we'll see. I'll make an actual thread with pictures and everything once the LEDs come in and I can actually find time to work on it. I'm worried about ruining the board when I start soldering but I'll just hope for the best hahaAuxiliary output for running to an amp? Or auxiliary input for plugging in an mp3 player or whatever? Has it been changed over to LEDs?
Did you figure out what you need? These are T1 or 3mm bulbs if that helps.
I replaced the bulbs in my radio because they weren't working and it turns out all but two were burned out and one of them had a bad solder and was intermittent. I just went with incandescents at the time because I wasn't sure if they were just burned out or what the deal was and I didn't want to muddy the waters making multiple changes at once. I used 7219 bulbs which are actually a little hot in my opinion. If I was going incandescent again, I'd go with a lower wattage(I'm not sure how bright they're supposed to be, but these bulbs are plenty bright enough that one could go a little lower without them being too dim). I read and found multiple sources using them, so I went with them, but the internet being what it is, who knows if they're really the right bulb or not. The buttons are right on the edge of too hot to touch comfortably.
Now that I know the bulbs were just burned out, I might go back and swap them for white LEDs, but I know want to change to an aftermarket stereo, so I sort of don't want to put the effort into doing it.
Getting the solder clear from the holes is probably the worst of the job. Lots of little dainty ****. As I recall, you should be able to tell by the traces pretty easily which side is ground. If you can't figure it out, post a picture of your board when you get in that far.