<blockquote id="quote"><font size="1" face="Century Gothic, Verdana, Arial, Helvetica" id="quote">quote:<hr height="1" noshade id="quote"><i>Originally posted by Shauniedawn</i>
I'd personally go for an old fashioned unit. They sound pants so I don't even bother turning mine on - just enjoy the engine instead. However this would be different if I was travelling hundreds of miles or doing some regular commuting.
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I'm with you there Shaun. Even during my 5,000 km trip to San Diego I didn't turn the radio on once. The English couple (came from just about 50 miles north of you) did play the Beach Boys "California Girls" over the two way radios as we were driving along the beaches on Highway #1 though. Maybe I'm just getting too old and crotchety but like in "American Graffiti" it seems the music went down hill the day Buddy Holley died (or at least after Woodstock '69). [8D]
There is a company in the US that will take your original radio (if you have it) and put in a new modern innards and clean it up, supply missing knobs making it looks like new. Don't have the website handy though.
- - - - TR7 Spider - - - - - - - - 1978 Spitfire - - - - - - 1976 Spitfire - - 1988 Tercel 4X4 - Kali on Integra - 1991 Integra - - Yellow TCT