To remove antennas' you will have to unscrew the antenna from where it is currently located on the outside of the car. Usually it will have one or two types of nuts holding it in place, you will probably have to open the hood and hold the interior nut with a wrench - pull what is left of the wire through and if you have a new wire you can probably attach it to the current antenna or you could just go to a juckyard and pick on up an entire antenna and wire connected off of the same type of vehicle as yours. Reattach the antenna the same way you took it off and rethread the wire back through the firewall and plug it into the radio - most radios take a special jack on the end so you will have to replace at the very least the wire.
its alright
make sure the speakers werent stolen first off then try new wires from the stereo to a speaker that you are sure works. if that speaker doesnt work take your stereo back
stereo, money, gps, backback, cds
The stock roof-mounted antenna on the 2005 Toyota Matrix will unscrew from the antenna base that is attached to the roof. If your original antenna has been stolen, you should be able to obtain a replacement antenna and just screw it on the the antenna base that is still attached to the roof of your Matrix.
If turn signals are malfunctioning after a stereo has been stolen on a 1996 Honda Accord then there may be a problem with the wiring. The wiring flows into the same fuse and an open wire can cause the lights to malfunction.
They would have to be stolen from your home. Then you get the money and buy it yourself.
That depends on the policy that you have with your insurance company. When I had my truck broken into, my policy covered the iPod and stereo that were stolen, plus my rental while my truck was in the shop.
If the stereo was ripped out when it was stolen there is a good chance the cigar lighter wiring was damaged at the same time You need to check the wiring for breaks/fraying/shorting It has possibly gone dead short and blown the fuse
you should tell your bank and they will replace it.
Usually you can collect yourself. The company may initially pay you only "actual cash value" of the equipment, which means what it was worth at the time it was stolen(usually replacement cost with a deduction for depreciation based on the age and condition). Then, once it has actually been replaced, they pay the remainder up to the full replacement cost. Some policies limit the amount they will pay for non-factory equipment. If the insurer says you have to use a certain party to replace, ask them to show you that requirement in your policy. If they cant, the above applies.
No, the only reason itunes would replace your music is if your computer got lost/stolen while being in the hands of an certified apple technician in an apple store. It's your job to back up your data not apple's job to replace it.
That's not even a question. Try again.