The antenna plugs into the amplifier, not the radio. The amplifier is located up under the dash directly above the "hump" in the floor board. You may want to remove the center dash piece (which either houses a tape deck or a storage compartment) to help you see what you are doing.
No. The antenna (a black wire and a blue wire) plugs into an antenna amplifier which is mounted below the rear glass. That amplifier output plugs into the radio control. The guys at EconoAutoParts.com helped me with this answer. My AM stations all disappeared after I had window tint installed.
Remove the retaining cover from your 1994 Chevy S 10 pickup truck radio. Remove the radio retaining bolts. Slide the radio out. Remove the wiring harness and the antenna cable from the back of the radio.
use ngk spark plugs
remove wheel and remove the plastic liner inside the fender. remove the radio and disconnect the antenna wire. Tape another, 10' long wire to the end of the antenna wire. Unscrew the nut around the antenna from on top. pull the antenna and antenna wire out through the fender. Tape the 10' long wire to the new antenna wire and pull it back through the dash to the radio.
Radio antenna can be translated as: Funkantenne Radionantenne
code for radio sierra
Bad antenna? Radio needs to be trimmed Bad antenna? Radio needs to be trimmed
The radio antenna converts electromagnetic radiation to electrical energy
Could be broke, or might just be a Hyundai radio. Check antenna, and cable from antenna to radio.
To connect the radio antenna on a 1993 Ford F-150, the back of the radio needs to be exposed under the dash. Plug the radio antenna wire into the back of the radio and tighten the nut.
You can replace an XM radio antenna with a CB antenna, a ham 40-meter mobile antenna, a cellphone antenna, a GPS antenna, a TV antenna, a wire coat hanger, a 6 GHz microwave antenna, or a chain of paperclips. However, since none of them is optimized to operate at the frequencies of XM radio, like the XM antenna is, none of the others will work as well. Most of them will likely be so inefficient at the satellite radio frequencies that when you use one of those, you hear nothing at all on your radio.
From the factory, the "radio" in the dash actually serves as a remote. The "brain" of it is in the rear quarter panel with the factory subwoofer. This is where the antenna plugs into. When I replaced mine, I had to buy an extension and run it up to the dash. Also, I had to buy an adapter to run the speaker wires up to the dash as well. It sucks, I know.