In-Dash 6.2" Touchscreen DVD/CD/MP3/USB Car Stereo Receiver w/ GPS Navigation and Bluetooth
• Double DIN 6.2" TFT LCD Touchscreen Display
• 80W x 4 Chan. Max, 20W x 4 Chan. RMS
• 3 Sets of 2V Preamp Outputs
• 2-Band Parametric
• Built-in Bluetooth
• Steering Wheel Control Ready
• Double DIN 6.2" TFT LCD Touchscreen Display
• 80W x 4 Chan. Max, 20W x 4 Chan. RMS
• 3 Sets of 2V Preamp Outputs
• 2-Band Parametric
• Built-in Bluetooth
• Steering Wheel Control Ready
Internal Product ID:
68052
DVD Double din
Beautiful music starts with a good stereo. This one is a good start. Very good sound and easy setup make this one a very good buy. The only drawback is the documentation is lacking in better description of the settings and the plugs for the sd cards are weak
8
found this helpful.A lot of Features in a Cheap Package
I installed this in my fiance's 2010 Scion xD. It fit well with the included harness and dash kit. It has some minor protrusion but not noticeable to the average person. It adds a lot of spice to the interior of her car considering the stock Pioneer was pretty lacking.
The unit itself gets the job done and works well. Everything is basically what you would expect from a cheaper head unit.
You may not like it if the following is an issue for you:
It is missing the illumination light wire for syncing brightness with the car's headlights. The menus feel a little cheap but are still functional. The response time for inputs is decent but not the fastest. It lacks some easy accessible audio settings for GPS/BT. Setting up steering wheel controls took a lot of troubleshooting (had to set the HU to high/low voltage to receive the inputs). The iPod option doesn't allow you to select a specific song you want to hear. I believe the SD card music option just lists all songs as 1 root directory. The minimum volume setting is too loud, and when you raise the volume incrementally it progresses too fast (so Vol. 1 to vol. 6 is a big difference). Some of the timezone and daylight savings options are screwy (you have to set the wrong timezone I think for accurate time). The touchscreen is not capacitive like an iphone/android but resistive like a Garmin GPS.
You may want this head unit if you like the following:
GPS loads up in a reasonable amount of time and navigates accurately (assuming its not modern construction). The sound it delivers seems pretty good. The iPod option allows you to play songs in order or random. BT works for music and phone calls. You can set any picture to wallpaper via SD card (but haven't tested this yet). You can watch DVDs while driving (not recommended for driver). It has a lot of options even though they aren't done as well as better name brand head units.
I hope this helps! I would recommend this HU if you need to get all the features on a budget. If you can sacrifice some features like GPS and/or BT then you can get a better name brand with a higher quality experience.
7
found this helpful.Lots of Hits... But Some Misses Too
INSTALLATION: Metra Kit for 2006 Pilot was off. Needed to Dremel (enlarge) side holes in kit to line up with tapped holes in unit. Top mounting tabs to dash interior needed to be shimmed out by ~3/16" (used 3 stacked washers under tab holes) to push unit down and correctly align with dash front opening. Ends up slightly tilted so top of unit protrudes a little, but bottom is still flush with opening. Angle actually makes display more vertical and easier to view while it still has that "built-in" look.
INTERFACE: Physical buttons on front face a big plus... easier access to radio/nav/vol/tuning, etc. Graphics a bit cluttered and out-of-date looking, but usable. Fairly quick boot-up from cold starts (audio/visual and nav). Remembers last selected input on start-up (except nav which must be manually restarted). Various setting and menus can be hard to find, access or hidden (read the manual carefully and be prepared to play around with it a lot.)
RADIO: Works and sounds fine. Better than stock, but have only used with stock speakers so far. Basic RDS displays a small line of text in upper right corner with current station/song. Some people complaining of eradicate station selection may have inadvertently enabled AF/TA/PTY (deselect to avoid in bottom menu using swipe to left to open hidden settings on right side).
BLUETOOTH: Works well, but with some caveats. Must use with external microphone plugged into rear port. Confusing because the manufacturer's prerelease photos have shown the word "mic" printed by a hole in upper left front panel implying an internal microphone. The actual product does not have that (though hole for mic is still there.) Manufacturer support emailed back "they work together, but the external mic must be plugged in." Haven't verified that, but voice pickup is fine with external mic. Pairs with iPhone 5 (running iOS6), but does not reconnect after powering off/on. Must go into iPhone and "forget" connection and re-pair it with unit next time it's used. Old Android phone (running Gingerbread) connects without pairing and seems to work better in this regard.
SD/USB: Works fine sound wise. Usual limitation of no playlist/album/artist support, only one long song list by folder in the order it was physically written to media by computer. Seems to be a universal characteristic of car head units. Shuffle play is available. Haven't yet explored the limits on the number of song/folder/subfolders software will recognize. Works with micro SD card slot in front and mini-USB front plug (with supplied adapter cable)/full size rear connector.
IPOD: Works thru supplied cable that connects to proprietary rear port. Cable uses the old style 30-pin apple connector (need adapter to use with lightning.) Need to run cable to somewhere accessible like your glove box or front console.
CD/DVD: Haven't explored this much, but it's played anything I've thrown at it. DVD video looks good... but one need to go into setting menu (available only during playback by tapping screen) to select the proper aspect ratio like 16:9. A parking brake override is available in the main menu under Video settings for use with or without the parking brake wire connected.
NAV: That's a mixed bag. Runs PolNav6 software with NAVTEQ maps. Both reasonably up-to-date (2012.Q1 maps). Boot up and satellite lock is fast, navigation routes OK, and the interface is not too confusing. But TTS street name pronunciations are terrible, almost to the point of being useless. If you can live without TTS, its acceptable. Can substitute and run any WINCE6 compatible navigation software you care to install via SD card.
9
found this helpful.eh...
Radio is not user friendly takes a couple min to read an sd card every time you want to play from it. Screen washes out terribly in even moderate sun. The Bluetooth is very good but you will have to get some good auto trim tape to mount the mic. Even after a good cleaning with alcohol the supplied tape wouldn't stick. The gps is terrible. If you use a space rather than a - it tries to divide by 0 or something. If you try to search by name and don't add a space T the end of the name it won't find it. If a road has a hyphenated name it won't fine I'd.
6
found this helpful.Nice Navigation
It fits nicely on my dodge caravan 2013 with metra dash kit. The sound quality is as normal as other radios. The clock time does not support daylight saving time. So, you have to select eastern time zone while in Central time zone to increase an hour. The GPS time zone is fine for DST. The GPS works very perfectly. The bluetooth is also work nicely. The back up camera also woks fine. I can turnof the volume using volume settings while using the back up. My audio shop guy tested his iphone and it works fine too. I don't have iPad at this time, so not worry now. There are very few selections for wall paper, but it is not a big deal. Overal, I give it to five star for the price and functionality.
7
found this helpful.Best selling similar products