Pioneer Appradio Install w/pic

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clarkvstewart

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Bought one of these Monday for my birthday. GPS/Bluetooth phone and iPod/Pandora control for under $400? No brainer.

To install this radio in a 2003 Yukon like mine with Bose and Onstar you'll need the following:

1) Metra Axxess GMOS 104 Interface. That number is correct as far as I know. Got it at Crutchfield for $100. This lets you plug the radio into the factory harness and retain Bose amp and Onstar functions.

2) Metra Axxess SWC To retain steering wheel controls

3) GM radio antenna adapter.

4) Dash install kit of your choice.

Start by disconnecting your battery ground. Then place the key in the ignition and place the vehicle in low gear 1 (all the way down with shifter) with a flathead screw driver, pry off the dash surrounding the radio. There are only three screws holding the factory radio in place. Remove those and pull the old unit out disconnecting pig tails as you go.

Now I recommend making all the new connections in the house on a table - preferably with a soldering gun and heat shrink tubing. It's a hellish mess of wires at first glance. I chose to follow the connections in the GMOS interface as they were a little more complete than the appradio. Fortunately the colors are identical between the two sets of wires. Finish your connections.

I will save y'all a headache. The GMOS interface is made by the same folks that make the SWC interface. We learned after some head scratching that the GMOS interface includes all the same wires that are included in the steering wheel control package! The only thing you'll need to do with the SWC package is plug the black box into the GMOS interface and wire the SWC according to the wires and instructions remaining in the GMOS interface. In other words you'll have a fair share of left over wires from the SWC kit!

Once all your connections are made move to the vehicle and start plugging in pigtails from the GMOS to the factory connectors. This is where this GMOS unit shines! The only remaining wires are the parking brake wires to the radio. Pioneer doesn't want you to mess with videos while driving do they make a funky parking brake security setup to keep you from watching them while driving. You have to activate the parking breaking then release it to get the green light to watch video like Netflix. I'll leave it to you to decide if you want to bypass it. I tried a switch but couldn't get it to work, and some folks swear by the relay method while others say it doesn't work. I haven't screwed anymore with it.

At this point I'd make sure you have a good antenna connection because my adapter wouldn't hold onto the factory pin for some reason so I had to crimp it with pliers. It's supremely frustrating to finish your install only to find the damn radio plays like crap!

On to the GPS antenna and mic locations. For the GPS we elected to place it on the roof since it also has a magnetic mount. We removed the weatherstrip around the top of the door and found a convenient little notch in the door frame so the wire won't be pinched. We then pulled the plastic A pillar cover out and ran the wire down the pillar. And under the dash where the fuse panel is. From there up and over the gauges into the stereo compartment.

For the mic we followed the same route down the A pillar, with a twist. The best place for the mic is directly overhead where there's no way to mount it. We simply pulled the stripping off the door again and the molding off the driver's side of the sunroof. Once that was done you can just get your fingers through the pulled down headliner to reach the much from the pillar. We positioned it without any bracket directly overhead then pulled back until there was no wire showing, only mic. Then we replaced all the molding. It's snug so you won't have to worry about it moving. It is virtually unnoticeable.

Here's the hard part - a caveat if you will. This stereo is not a perfect fit in this dash. Crutchfield recommends cutting the dash pillar at the back of the stereo hole. I can't imagine the amount of torture this would require with some sort of Dremel tool, so I didn't do it. That said my radio sticks out further than stock, but is not noticeable with a dash kit covering the gap. It's a ***** to get all your wires out from behind the unit, and the best place to stuff em is behind the gauge cluster to the left of the dash.

As for programming the SWC interface it's easy. The thing will try to do it itself the first time it gets power, and if you don't play ball it goes into standby mode. Learned this after getting the thing in and forgot all about programming it!

Simply unplug the unit from its pigtail with the ignition on then reconnect. The unit will start flashing rapidly. Immediately press the Volume Up button on the steering wheel repeatedly. After a few seconds the light will go off. Quit pressing the button. The device will blink intermittently like a dash light error code does then if you did it right it will finally go solid red. At this point turn on the radio and see if volume works. In my rig the volume up down works, and seek seems to as well, the source button does nothing, and program button changes station presets I believe. The talk button works the built in factory phone I guess (Onstar was deactivated in my ride).

Now that everything is working do your best to push the unit as far in as you can. TAKE SPECIAL CARE OF THE IPHONE CABLE CONNECTING TO THE STEREO. YOU CAN DAMAGE THE PIGTAIL IF YOU'RE NOT CAREFUL! It acted sketchy with me showing the phone wasn't connected. I wiggled the wires in back of the pigtail and it picked up again. I've got a two year warranty with Bestbuy, but for now I just eased the unit in. I ran the other end of the iPhone cord out of the tab below my large passenger vent on the dash. On my Yukon this is a blank set of tabs and one with the traction control button. On other models this is the onstar button, but mine is on the mirror. I just popped out the tab and ran the wire out there. I plan on using a vent mount for my phone so the hole won't look too sketchy. I originally wanted to run out the cubby holes below the ac controls but was told I'd be cutting into the air box if I did.

Now that the radio is in the dash it's time to put the dash back on. In my case the radio allowed the dash to plug back into the tabs in all spots except the last tab right beside the right of the steering column. It leaves a gap at the ac control, but since no light leaks through from below I dont see where this is an issue. You have to actively hunt any gaps.

I'll post more pics as I take them. If you have specific wiring questions let me know. Below is the installed stereo.

45f40863-3c93-9ff9.jpg
 

The 'ER

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Another radio choice for me to add to the list of what should I buy. It looks really good.
 
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clarkvstewart

clarkvstewart

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Yeah I like it, but it is in the infant stages so there's plenty of work to the GUI to make it shine. Like my calendar entry didn't display well when I was messing with it earlier. But I'll never use that feature so it's not a huge deal to me.
 

06xl

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Sweet might have to sell my for one of those is that the newest DD from pioneer??
 
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clarkvstewart

clarkvstewart

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It's certainly new. Came out in August I think. Theyve released Appradio 2 for Android folks now too. I can update and say that the Appradio app is a janky piece of software that I havent figured out yet. If you are navigating then it won't let the radio play (from what I can tell). The steering wheel controls work well and can be reprogrammed in the radio settings. I figured out that source will jump between iPod, radio, and whatever app is running. With the mic placed where I've got it the sound quality is excellent on Bluetooth calling. Had a conversation last night and the caller had no idea they were on speaker. Text messages from the phone display on the screen, and I'm told from Appradiocentral.com that you can use dragon dictation to reply hands free, but I'm gonna try to see how Siri plays with the setup. I'm gonna post pics in a minute.

45f40863-3cef-ce2c.jpg
Unit sits a little crooked so I'll have to adjust it a bit.

45f40863-3d27-2c8e.jpg

Mic above head by sunroof

45f40863-3d3c-7574.jpg

GPS antenna

45f40863-3d4e-a307.jpg

I'm gonna get a vent mount so that hole is not noticeable when my phone is hooked up. I could have fabbed the cover but the wire diameter was nearly the same as the opening!
 

06xl

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They should have made it a bigger screen with all that black line around the screen IMO
 
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clarkvstewart

clarkvstewart

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Pretty slick. I read that it needed a level surface to work. I assume that you're not having issues though. To be honest I don't know how we'd be able to tell since the phone has GPS too.
 

Pachanga02

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I put my gps antenna inside on the dash to the left of the vin plate. Ran the wire alongside the dash. Works great and no worries of someone cutting it.
 
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clarkvstewart

clarkvstewart

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Finally finished the install. After trying to make the radio fit in the dash and removing it to cut plastic, I discovered that a wire came loose from the iPhone cable pin connector. I swapped the radio for a new unit and the install went smoothly from there.

Here's how much I removed from the dash to make it fit
45f40863-2947-23bc.jpg



I installed a switch to bypass the Pioneer safeguard requiring me to apply the parking brake, release it, then reapply to access certain apps. Now I just flip the switch back and forth. I put it in that useless space beside the driver side vent.
45f40863-297b-d148.jpg


To use this switch take a simple toggle switch and wire the ground to "ground" and attach the parking brake wire from the Appradio to the "load" on the switch. Leave the other pin empty. I grounded my switch on a dash bolt where the cab fuse panel is located on the driver side:
45f40863-2a94-feb1.jpg


Thanks to another's comment this time around I just ran the GPS antenna from the dash user the vin plate down through the defrost vent to the radio:
45f40863-2b0b-6724.jpg


It took two dash kits to make this thing look right in the dash. One was a Metra kit but it was a pain because you had to cut several pieces of plastic off to find the specific fit for the truck. In the end the plastic was too thick for the supplied screws to reach the radio! I ended up getting a Scoshe 92-up GM kit that fit the sides like a glove, then used the front plate from the Metra kit to fill any gaps in the front of the radio:
45f40863-2bc6-c310.jpg


Finally I bought a Pro Clip brand iPhone dash mount. I was already balls deep in this radio so what's another $125 right?! Don't know if the mount is worth that, but it does allow the iPhone cable to remain plugged into the mount, and the iPhone slips in and out of the cradle so I don't have to wear out the radio iPhone cable. It's an incredibly well built setup though:
45f40863-2c44-408a.jpg


So far I like the Appradio. I will admit that the unit is still a little buggy, but Pioneer has updated it several times since its release in Aug of 2011. That's the beauty of this radio. You can update it with a microSD card and with new apps being released its like a whole new animal.

Siri works too though not by design. I haven't played with it enough, but sometimes Siri comes through the mic and speakers and other times I have to speak up for her to hear me. I use her to make a quick phone call. I'd like to see Pioneer add a favorite numbers list in the phone. It's a pain to scroll through numbers and not too safe. With Siri I tell her who to call and she dials the digits. Once the call is connected the speakers and mic kick in. They're already hacking this radio to allow it to run windows. Some have even managed to get Internet explorer rolling on it.
 

Pachanga02

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Good to see that everything worked out for you. Your gps antenna is exactly where I have mine. Out of the way and no worries.
 

tdark1582

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looks good might have to get this. Its a great upgrade to the factory system, just mad it only supports ipod/iphone.:Boo:
 

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