Help Solve this Audio Mystery!!

Stereo, security systems, vehicle electronics, and electrical-related discussions
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blueskyflyer
Posts: 1
Joined: Sun Feb 10, 2019 8:07 am

Help Solve this Audio Mystery!!

Post by blueskyflyer »

Weird one.
04 Vibe, base and stock.
Stereo:
CD player is fine and plays at normal volume.
AM channels seem to be fine and play at normal volume.
FM channels are able to be tuned and received but sound is almost completely non-existant even at high volume levels.
Thought it was likely the antenna base/mast had gone bad so replaced but the issue remains.
Granted, it was purchased used off eBay so it is possible that it was also bad, but I am thinking unlikely.
So that leaves me scratching my head and thinking it must be the radio itself somehow.
Any thoughts would be seriously appreciated!
VibeNation2024
Posts: 109
Joined: Mon Mar 18, 2024 6:06 pm
Location: Central IL

Re: Help Solve this Audio Mystery!!

Post by VibeNation2024 »

I will try to help but need some more details.

1. Did you have any issues with sound with the original radio?
2. Was the new radio a plug and play or did you have to use an adapter or jumper wiring harness?
3. When you say the sound is "almost completely non-existant even at high volume levels", do you just hear static or the actual song/talking?
4. Did you reach out the the seller on ebay to check? I know they will probably say it was working or sold as-is but sometimes you can find a good deal when the seller knows there was an issue but they sell it anyway since a buyer might only want to use the CD player.
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joatmon
Posts: 10176
Joined: Fri Mar 21, 2003 5:19 am
Location: Room 101

Re: Help Solve this Audio Mystery!!

Post by joatmon »

I think he replaced the antenna, not the head unit.

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Welcome to Genvibe blueskyflyer. Remember when flying, fly in the middle of the air ;)

The only time I ever ran into something like that was when I was using an FM transmitter to play music from my phone over the car radio. Those things are built cheap, and they emit a broad band of signal, wiping out over the air signals even away from the audio transmitter's supposedly tuned frequency. Sometimes a ghost of the commercial signal could get through, but very faint. Even then, the affected range of interference was under 10 MHz, the transmitter tuned to say 88.1 MHz had no effect on on the 100+ MHz stations. If yours is the same across the full band, its not likely a transmitter interference.

The antenna base has a built in amplifier, but if that's not working, then its the AM band that suffers most.

If you can't figure it out otherwise and decide to get a used replacement radio, be sure that it came from a Vibe or a Matrix. GM used other radios that look the same, but they require connection to a GM car data bus that the Vibe, being mostly Toyota, doesn't have. You might find one nearby from a junkyard, check car-part.com Around me they list some as cheap as $30, but a lot of these radios get the paint rubbed off the buttons. Its not too hard to replace the radio, or to swap buttons between them. If you get really lucky, you might even find a nearby genviber who'd be willing to do a temporary radio swap to help diagnose the issue

If you go for an aftermarket radio, I'd recommend one with bluetooth. I also have a car with android auto, I'm addicted to that too, but that feature jacks up the price of aftermarket units
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