Interesting. I too have lifetime XM on my Vibe but will easily own the car for 20+ years so I'm not too concerned about losing it. My take on this is that if this "hidden receiver" was somehow installed into the car, then it can somehow be removed and transferred to another Vibe if need be. It just may involve a lot of work BUT should be accomplish-able. I may look into this over the winter when my work slows down just to satisfy my curiosity!kumquat wrote:There's a receiver hidden elsewhere in the car. You won't be able to install the Vibe's radio or the receiver in another vehicle.
Another Vibe, sure. But not another car.tpollauf wrote:Interesting. I too have lifetime XM on my Vibe but will easily own the car for 20+ years so I'm not too concerned about losing it. My take on this is that if this "hidden receiver" was somehow installed into the car, then it can somehow be removed and transferred to another Vibe if need be. It just may involve a lot of work BUT should be accomplish-able. I may look into this over the winter when my work slows down just to satisfy my curiosity!kumquat wrote:There's a receiver hidden elsewhere in the car. You won't be able to install the Vibe's radio or the receiver in another vehicle.
I gave you a firm answer. The XM receiver is a separate module mounted behind the right rear trim panel, where the subwoofer is/would be.Caretaker wrote:Tim, thanks. I really would like to get this nailed down with a firm answer. If this mystery part can't be removed, then so be it. I just have not had any firm answers from any of the boards I belong to; just a bunch of guesses and anecdotal prognostications. Like you, I also plan on putting as many band aids on my Vibe until it can no longer be fixed, just to get the most out of my lifetime XM. It does burn me that Sirius/XM cannot reward those of us who took a huge risk on giving them $415 for lifetime XM when their stock was 17 cents a share and it was looking like they would not survive another month. We pumped money into a dying company and the only lifetime they give us is through our internet at home. I certainly don't expect them to give me "free" XM for my entire lifetime, but a one time transfer to a mobile unit or a one time transfer to a different vehicle does not seem unreasonable, again for those of us who help prop up the company in its darkest days. Oh well. I don't expect them to change the rules midstream, especially given the outrageous monthly price they are now charging for service, so I'll just cross my fingers that my car never gets t-boned.
Before I get myself into trouble I guess I'd better educate myself on the latest in this radio technologykumquat wrote:
I gave you a firm answer. The XM receiver is a separate module mounted behind the right rear trim panel, where the subwoofer is/would be.
Apparently if you try to swap the receiver to another car, it'll activate Theftlock.