NJDirtyBird7, on 15 April 2012 - 03:38 PM, said:
I don't have a problem with trial and error, I can do that. But I don't have a clue where to look on the car for the problem. Do I have to get behind the radio or could the issue be under the hood?
It's all a guess, but my guess is you'd have to pull the head unit and check every connection -- I doubt the problem is under the hood (though it could be theoretically). If they didn't install a new amp, I'd be surprised if they even opened the hood. One way to shortcut it would be if the installer wired in a harness rather than cutting and crimping every single connection. If they wired in a harness, you can first look to any connections that aren't on the harness (i.e., any connection that is wired to something else on the car besides the wiring harness). Reason being anything in the factory wiring harness was probably working correctly before. If they didn't, you'd literally have to check each and every connection. Even if they did, it might be that when he wired the harness to the head unit, there's a shorted connection or a ground loop inherent in the harness, etc.
So it might be as simple as "there's this antenna connection or this power-on connection or whatever, and they wired it to this or that source, and I'm going to try another source," or it might be as complicated as literally going one at a time and figuring out which connections are wired the same as the previous head unit and which ones are different, or it might be worse than all that and you literally have to run down each connection separately.