AVIC D1 head unit installed
I opened up the radio area both above and below. I put in some plastic behind the radio opening, superglued them in place, then used abs plastic pipe melted in acetone to make a goop to fill in the cracks.
I sanded on it a while and this is what I got.
Oh yeah, I removed all of the painted on coating with acetone and a rag. It rubbed right off doing this for about 20 minutes. Doing this also left most of the stock molded in lines that simulate that leather look.
I bought a used console piece from the forum to do this to. When I got it is was in really bad shape. it was cracked in several places and the coating was halfway pealed off. I also managed to break the top piece that goes across the top radio openeing. all of it was glued back together using the acetone and abs goop, (original owner tried using epoxy that was just pealing off because it does not stick) and sanded back to shape.
I after I completed all of this I saw a plastic epoxy at the store that might of been easier to work with.
I finished it off by painting the console with the rubber paint used to make grips on your tools.
I have not had the console piece in since the pictures were taken, so I dont know how well the paint will hold up to daily abuse.






Cajundude. I bought one of those cheap soldering irons, mine was 99 cents, and started removing material from the top and bottom. it was a bit of a mess, but worked out. I then used a hand file and cleaned it up to make it straight. then I used sand paper to get the final clean lines, then added the plastic, goop, and started over with the sanding.
I was looking for my dremel but missplaced it somewhere. it would of made things much easier with shaping the curves.






I opened up the radio area both above and below. I put in some plastic behind the radio opening, superglued them in place, then used abs plastic pipe melted in acetone to make a goop to fill in the cracks.
I sanded on it a while and this is what I got.
Oh yeah, I removed all of the painted on coating with acetone and a rag. It rubbed right off doing this for about 20 minutes. Doing this also left most of the stock molded in lines that simulate that leather look.
I bought a used console piece from the forum to do this to. When I got it is was in really bad shape. it was cracked in several places and the coating was halfway pealed off. I also managed to break the top piece that goes across the top radio openeing. all of it was glued back together using the acetone and abs goop, (original owner tried using epoxy that was just pealing off because it does not stick) and sanded back to shape.
I after I completed all of this I saw a plastic epoxy at the store that might of been easier to work with.
I finished it off by painting the console with the rubber paint used to make grips on your tools.
I have not had the console piece in since the pictures were taken, so I dont know how well the paint will hold up to daily abuse.
Awesome job Bill!!
Do you have any high res pictures of your install. I would love to see them since I am considering doing a similar install in my C5 soon
If you have higher resolution pictures and don't mind sharing you can email to me at vette.pilot@gmail.com
Thanks
The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts
Where did you use PCV goop other than repairing the damaged dash piece ?
I would also be interested in hi-res pictures if you have any: twalker@qis.net
Thanks.
I think EVERYONE would be interested in some higher res pics that maybe you could post for all of our benefit. Also, did you only modify (thin) the lower plastic between the radio and the climate control or did you aslo slightly modify the top as well?
Again...great job. Seriously thinking about that install.
Tony M.
Please, for your ears sake, upgrade the speakers too. If you don't you will need to buy an adaptor to make the 8" woofers in the doors work. IMO, spend that money on better speakers. You can get very good speakers in the factory locations in the doors and look completely stock, it just won't sound stock
It will only cost you an extra $150-$250 (depending on how "good" you want to go) which is nothing compared to the cost of the Pioneer HU.Also, IMO, rear speakers are not needed but if you feel you want them just use the factory rears off the HU.
Best wishes
I have lots of stuff to build for all new speakers/subs before I even get to putting it in for good. Currently I am back to stock so I can drive the car. I wont be running any of the bose stuff. I think it sounds horrible.
I also added it to the corner pieces, as I had to shape them back in.
Do you have the original pictures that were taken at a higher resolution before they were resized to post online?
I would love to see them
You can send them to me via email at vette.pilot@gmail.com and I can host them for you if you want to share them with everyone here
Thanks again Bill
You have to bend a bit of the metal that holds the stock stereo out of the way. I had the whole dash out 2 days before to install the HUD. I didnt even think putting the pioneer in there would be an issue. after I put the whole dash back together I saw the head unit would not fit. I drilled a bunch of holes into the crease of the metal to weaken it so I could bend it back to fit the double din unit. I actually ended up using a small hammer, and got the claw end on the metal and used it as leverage to bend it down. I broke the upper taps off that block the way with pliers. Once I did this the unit fit pretty tight.
The pioneer has a case on it for normal installs. I removed it by pulling off the 4 screws per side, and built brackets that went into the front 8 holes and into the stock mounting face metal. I will have to take pics at some other date if this is confusing to anyone. it will basically determine how far left and right the unit fits and keep it from comming back out.
the last hurdle has been the fm antenna adapter. when you plug it in the unit, it hits the back of the dash, I think it is going into the AC housing. At this point I was debating on taking the dash back out and making a hole in the AC vent box thing so it would fit, and possibly pick up some cool air for the fan on the pioneers head unit. I decided not to, and cut the adapter to pieces, basically soldering wires from 1/2 the adapter in the pioneer unit, to some pieces of the adapter that slide over the stock antenna piece. this is pretty ghetto, but it fits. I have no idea what it does to reception, I will post more on that later. if it is crap, I guess I will pulling the dash and drilling a hole for this thing to fit.
I have been debating on doing some hud experiments too, such as adding a numeric tach display, and playing around with the idea of trying to shoot an LCD image out there to see what it will do. I guess I will try and see what the antenna and the hud can so at the same time.
Last edited by bill mcdonald; Oct 5, 2005 at 05:22 PM.
















