You can just pull on the trim ring that goes around the heater control and stereo area and it will snap right out. To remove the factory stereo, you have to poke a stiff wire into the little holes near the sides/edges of the stereo to release the retaining clips and pull out on it at the same time. Then unplug the wires from the back of it. The new one will not usually have the same plug for the wires on it so you have to go to a car audio store and tell them the year of your Dodge and they will sell you one that will fit. It cost me about 20.00 when I did it but it was better than cutting the wires and splicing them and possibly messing something up in the process.
first you have to pop the cover off that's around the radio and then remove the 2 screwes that holds the radio. second unplug the wire connector from the radio. you also need a stereo connector for your aftermarket CD player to connect to the existing wire connector. once you have installed the connector to your CD player you need a installation kit for a 2000 dodge stratus to put your CD player in and bolt it to the existing holes your radio came from. plug your connectors and antenna wire together and reinstall your 2 screwes and pop your cover back on and you are done.
take the CD player out
Try the 2000 Dodge Dakota CD player. I hear it fits nicely.
buy the adapter harness at the stereo shop and the shrowd it will make your life much easier then just match up the wires and plug it in
No. Only country music CD's
no
It was an option.
You can replace a cd player for a car by removing the old CD player after the vehicle has been turned off, there may be screws or clips to remove, unplug the cable, insert it into the new player and then put it back into the space provided.
Begin by removing the cover to your 1996 Chevy Suburban CD player. Remove the CD player retaining bolts. Remove the wiring harness from the back of the CD player. Reverse the process to install your new CD player.
If a cd player does not eject check and see if a object has been stuck in it. If not the player probably is broken and needs a specialist to look at it.
CD players are so relatively inexpensive today that it would be more cost efficient to replace a damaged in-dash player.
It has to be in music CD format. IT will not play MP3's.