Vintage Car Audio?
CBear
902 Posts
A few months ago I picked up this old Accord with 63,000 og miles on it. I needed something to offset the gas costs of the '63 ford.
I want to put a nice stereo system in it, but it would be a shame to put something current and corny with multicolored LEDs blinking. All the stereo gear in my house is from the 70s and 80s and it was cheap and sounds fantastic. Is there good vintage car audio too? I'm making a custom walnut built-in console to house tapes below the tape player. I'd like to have some nice vintage stereo gear in there too. Anyone have any vintage car audio systems they want to floss?
I want to put a nice stereo system in it, but it would be a shame to put something current and corny with multicolored LEDs blinking. All the stereo gear in my house is from the 70s and 80s and it was cheap and sounds fantastic. Is there good vintage car audio too? I'm making a custom walnut built-in console to house tapes below the tape player. I'd like to have some nice vintage stereo gear in there too. Anyone have any vintage car audio systems they want to floss?
Comments
damn, those marantz units are fukin sweet!!
I went the reverse on my 68' FB mustang, all the crust likes to go with the original hardware, I opted to
go with the same look but with a 80's modern touch. I have this PYLE unit, not the exact one. I don't
have a cassette deck anymore, I'm thinking I want to go back to my 89' Sony cassette head unit that was in there
before I changed it out.
These guys sell a device that connects in between your antennae and back of your radio, you then can hook up an mp3 player to it (1/8" stereo jack) and still use the original stereo without any mods. Essentially, it works in a similar way to those tape cassette cd player adapters work, but far less obvious and ugly. Hit me up on the PM if you want more info.
http://www.rediscoveradio.com/
these guys may also have something you want....
http://www.vintagecarradio.com/
I want one of these Philips 45 players for my '56.
I thought about hooking a portable up and suspending it somehow, but I worried about keeping vinyl in a hot car.
Thanks for this. I'm not so concerned with keeping it original, but rather finding high-end aftermarket that's period correct. I was thinking I would put the iPod directly into an equalizer/pre-amp with an 1/8" to RCA, but this solution might be a nice way to hook it up so it works through the head unit.
It isn't my daily driver so it is mostly for show.