Sure you can. Just wrap it around your car's antenna.
Sure.
Sirius satellite radios, like XM radios, typically cost about $100 to be installed in cars.
Sirius makes a car dock option taht will provide satellite radio in your car.
Yes, of course. Having Sirius satellite radio in the car in no way prevents the car's doors from opening, and they may be opened with any of the traditional methods ... operate the lock with a key, a combination touch-pad, or a remote control, or simply lift the latch-handle. Note that the Sirius satellite radio is not involved with the locking mechanism in any way, and can't help you open the doors any more than it can hinder you.
Your sirius radio is advertised as "satellite" radio, and that's how they distribute it out and around the country from their headquarters studio, but that's not how it gets to your car. When you listen to it, you're listening to a local ground repeater, not to a satellite. So when you say there are no obstacles, it doesn't matter whether or not you can see the sky; you need to be looking at trees and buildings that may be blocking your horizontal path, just like any other radio, TV, cellphone, etc.
In order to pick up Sirius radio stations you will need to have a Sirius radio satellite receiver. If your current car radio does not have a auxiliary jack to plug the receiver into you may also need to get a new head unit for you cars audio system.
The portable model has a base that allows you to play the radio both in the car and at home.
The options for car radio antennas include internal car antennas, external car antennas, power antennas, and satellite antennas. The internal antenna is the least effective and most cars come with either the external fixed antenna or the power antenna unless their is a satellite radio in the car and then it is a satellite antenna.
Sirius satellite radios, like XM radios, typically cost about $100 to be installed in cars.
Sirius Sportster is a radio used to play Sirius satellite radio in your car, home, office, or anywhere else. It has a color, easy to navigate display and connects through the radio or speakers of other devices.
Sirius makes a car dock option taht will provide satellite radio in your car.
It depends on the type of car. Japanese? Sedan? Do you have a CD player and/or Sirius Satellite Radio?
Yes, of course. Having Sirius satellite radio in the car in no way prevents the car's doors from opening, and they may be opened with any of the traditional methods ... operate the lock with a key, a combination touch-pad, or a remote control, or simply lift the latch-handle. Note that the Sirius satellite radio is not involved with the locking mechanism in any way, and can't help you open the doors any more than it can hinder you.
yes because you are using the same radio frequency but as a portable device
Your sirius radio is advertised as "satellite" radio, and that's how they distribute it out and around the country from their headquarters studio, but that's not how it gets to your car. When you listen to it, you're listening to a local ground repeater, not to a satellite. So when you say there are no obstacles, it doesn't matter whether or not you can see the sky; you need to be looking at trees and buildings that may be blocking your horizontal path, just like any other radio, TV, cellphone, etc.
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In order to pick up Sirius radio stations you will need to have a Sirius radio satellite receiver. If your current car radio does not have a auxiliary jack to plug the receiver into you may also need to get a new head unit for you cars audio system.
Yes, because my dad used a GPS while traveling from Florida to New Jersey in a car to make it easier to get from destination to destination. NO! GPS And satellite radio are two different things. They cannot share an antenna. GPS and Radio are on 2 different frequencies GPS, GPS travels on a L1 Frequency up to 1575 MHz while radio is on BANDS, Like Sirius is on S band which holds DATA and Sound unlike GPS which holds DATA Only. So an Antenna that's on a car cannot receive both, the technology IS out there, but ONLY on NEW cars 2007 and UP :Bailors Of course they can. Any two receivers can share any one antenna. But depending on the frequencies that each of them is trying to receive, and on the antenna input circuit of each receiver, and on the characteristics of the antenna, and on the exact method of connecting both receivers to it, the number of receivers that deliver acceptable performance may be both, or one, or neither.