I just bought a 1994 Accord Coupe for my commute to work. This is my fourth Accord and my fifth Honda (the oddball being a 1986 CRX Si that I sadly wrecked in 1991).
The last owner had placed a decent Alpine AM/FM/CD player in the car and it's actually a pretty good radio, but it doesn't have any advanced or modern features at all. I will not be ditching this radio, but using it to provide AM/FM and CD playing to the system.
So, what am I doing then? I'm creating a Car PC system for all my long-commute multimedia entertainment needs. I did quite a bit of searching around and after about a week of both internet and soul searching, I settled on a
Car PC from a vendor on eBay who builds the heart of the system for you:
*
Case
* PS - M2-ATX Smart Power Supply
* CPU - ATOM 330 1.6GHz Dual Core 8 Watt CPU with 1Mb L2 cache 533MHz FSB
* Memory - 2Gb PC5300/667MHz
* BlueTooth
I only need to add a HD, which will be a 80GB SATA 2.5" drive.
The Accord Coupe has a double-din dash, but since I'm keeping the Alpine receiver for AM/FM/CD, I only have a single-din to work with. I do not want to mount a monitor on the dash as nothing says "steal me" like a monitor bolted to a dash. Instead, the
monitor I chose neatly folds up into the single-din slot to be completely hidden.
I am addicted to XM Radio, and so I'm going with the
mp3car XM Direct USB adapter which will be attached to a standard XMD-1000 tuner. For GPS, I am using a Garmin GPS 18 Deluxe USB Receiver.
Rounding out the build the is the
Griffin Edit Knob and a
Pyramid PB448X amplifier.
Installation will utilize the stock Honda speakers for now as I most miss my content in this new old car. I technically could perform the in-car installation, but I have a world-class installer just a mile from my home which is going to do the installation for about $300, which to me is a bargain as he's going to fabricate any and all bits of metal necessary to make it a good, solid installation, not to mention their expertise in running wires!
All of the parts have been ordered and should trickle in over the next week. I'm still torn about what front end software to use. I like the look of Centrifuse, but I really don't like the price. I'm a software developer and Street Deck appeals to me because I can easily write add-ons, which I fully intend to do.
I'll keep this thread updated with my progress!