if the speakers are the right size for the stock location, pull out the factory speaker and eather buy a special conector or cut the original conector off and get new wire and but splice the new wire to the factory wire and attact to the speaker.
Stock speakers should be 4x6's
6.5in
Infinity speakers
Yes and yes
The original speakers suck. I replaced them with some 6 x 8 Alpine 2-way speakers. Big difference even with stock stereo.
just so you know when i put a new stereo in my aerostar i had to run new wires to the stereo speakers because the stock stereo had a common ground so one ground for two speakers i damn near fried the deck figuring that out hopefuly you wont.
all I need is what the color codes from the stock wire harnes to connect to the new one
In the stock stereo pushing in the volume knob then pressing up/down on tune changes the hour
Look for a stereo amplifier with speaker-level inputs that can connect directly to the stock stereo unit in your 2000 Impala. Make sure the amplifier's power output matches the power requirements of your stock speakers to avoid any damage. Additionally, consider an amplifier with built-in crossover features to fine-tune the sound for your specific setup.
Fronts and backs are both 6.5 in. speakers. Aftermarket speakers dont install very easily because of the stock skrew-in locations are not normal. Ended up making my own brackets.
Yes you can. First, determine which type of signal input is required by your amplifier, RCA inputs or (+/-) speaker wire. If it's only RCA inputs and your stock stereo does not have RCA outputs in the rear of the unit, then you will have to convert each speaker wire pairs to RCA with a converter, then go to your amplifier. If your stock unit does have RCA out, then just use an RCA cable and connect the signal from your stereo to your amplifier. Then simply follow the instructions from your amplifier to connect your speakers depending on if they are 2ohm, 4ohm, or 8ohm, etc. PS - make sure you properly ground your amplifier to either chassis or directly to the negative on your battery. If you create any large amounts of resistance or have extra wire hanging around, you will get ground loops and EMI problems and hear engine noise from your speakers as you accelerate. Good Luck
there is a harness that connects the speakers, the stereo and any power (extras bought) in a single bunch. most stereo kits make adapters that fit on the back of an aftermarket stereo so you don't have to cut the harness. however, it is a tight fit behind the stock stereo because of a plastic backing built into the dash. recommend to not cut the harness and find a way to fit it all (adapter, new stereo harness, stock harness) into the space provided.