Yes you can, but you need knowledge of electronics (personally i do not wish to go into detail because i do not know what you have/ know) its actually fairly simple, take the cord out of the monitor, then hook it up to a jack of any size. for example, a 1/4 inch for guitar amps. this will probably give a monotone, and may not be in the human hearing range. Most heart monitors are both visual and audio. In many cases, you just need a dongle to split the line coming from the heart monitor. It's small and kind of flat, like a slim SD media card reader and will have two plugs on it. Not sure on the brain montor, but most heart monitors after '88 do audio.
someone hooked up the radio wrong...rewire... if its the original radio...haven't a clue.. Dave answer you have no constant live running to the memory pary of the radio all it takes is to change 2 wires over unfortunatly i forgot which 2 but any mechanic could advise
If you go to your local Pep Boys, ( I know, the expensive guys...) and ask them to get on their company web page, they have a link to a web page that I got all of my wiring, vaccum, and other lines diagrammed out for me...It really helped. If not, email me at cjhamilton@cpen.med.navy.mil and I can talk to my guy over there and get one and possibly mail or fax it to you.
if this is like my 89 don't worry about the diagram if you don't have the amp. This is wrecking yard material. Find that car in a wrecking yard and then get the amp and the wiring harness and clip the harness so you have enough wire to splice the same colors together. Radio Shack has match melt solder strips and heat shrink tubing to make the splicing easy. Or at this point probably cheaper to just rewire the whole stereo system with an aftermarket system And if your thinking about using a mark 7 factory amp for somthing else you wasting your time most normal head units produce as much power as that, your question is a little unclear i guess is what im trying to say.
You are probably talking about a type of microphone used to pick up those large bass frequencies coming from the bass drum. Microphones and speakers work in a very similar way, they operate by using an electric signal to transmit/receive audio messages. In fact, you can rewire a speaker to work as a microphone! Typically, the larger the speaker, the lower the frequencies that it can pick up. Since a 10-12" speaker is a very large diaphragm, it will respond very well to frequencies well below 250 Hz These speakers used as microphones are placed inside a resonator drum placed in front of the port hole of the kick drum. The resonator drum enhances the presence of the low end frequencies and as a result, you have a very punchy, powerful, and deep kick drum sound with a lot of presence.
Removing the radio from a 1990 Cressida is a pain, mainly because it is in three parts (radio/CD player, radio/CD player controls, and amplifier). First you remove the trim from the transmission shift area, then begin removing all the plastic items from around the radio and control strip, working your way up from the shift area. Note that you will probably not be able to replace the OEM radio --Toyota wants $2300 for one, but they don't have any. If you install an after-market replacement radio you'll have to rewire the speakers, because they are connected to the separate amplifier, located behind the radio on the firewall, which can only be controlled by the OEM system. Note also that if you install an after-market radio and you bypass the OEM radio controls (you'll have to leave them in place, or you'll have a gap in your dashboard), you'll need to be sure to reconnect the emergency flasher, which is located on the control strip. Good luck!
Just use 2 of the wires instead of 3.
I am sure you could, but if you are attempting to fix the problem it is simplest to just buy a new one for $5 on Ebay or Amazon. .j.
eHow is a great resource for topics like this, with articles like "How to Re-Wire a Lamp," "How to Rewire a Lamp with a Rotary Switch," "How to Rewire an Old Lamp," and "How to Wire a Floor Lamp."
Rewiring is easy
which model?
Yes, if you rewire the bed and rewire the plug on the wall to 220 volts.
Type your answer here... Why are you wanting to rewire the brake lights?
The end sockets have to be rewired. The schematic for the rewire is on the ballast label.
a while
Go to Road Race Enginiering they have a page on how to rewire the CAS
Unless the ballast is a multi tap primary you can not rewire it for 220 volts.
If this 'radio' is actually an audio receiver, with RCA inputs, no rewiring needed. simply purchase a 'Y' connector with a headphone jack on one end and RCA left/right on the other. This will allow you to output your iMac's sound into the receiver. If you're talking about an actual radio, i.e. something that does not accept RCA inputs, you could rewire it, but it wouldn't be easy. It would be easier to buy a set of amplified speakers.