CD Player Questions

I have a 2002 Goldwing. On the dash there is a CD button/selector. The trike does not have a CD player installed. I am in South Central Wisconsin and the radio stations are less than desirable with not many good choices. So I see on Ebay a bunch of CD type players for sale for a Goldwing. Some are Honda brand and some are other brands. They do come with a wiring harness with a plug in on the other end. Does anyone know if its as easy as plugging it into a empty plug in under the seat somewhere and then selecting the CD feature on the dash? It would be a easy way to have some nicer music at times.

TIA, Jim
 
Factory CD player was not a popular option. It goes under the rear trunk. There s a trap door in the bottom. I would do the MP3 player.
 
CD's are very outdated technology. MP3's gives the owner much more options and a much larger playlist. Do the new Wings even have a CD option on the console????
 
I started out with 8 tracks if that tells you anything. I just within the last 2 years through a box of 100+ 8 tracks out. Then the next big thing was cassettes. Still got a few hundred of them in stock. Then next came CD's. I also have hundreds of them. I figured with my age and not wanting to learn more things I would stick with CD's. But after looking up the MP3 players that were linked here it seems the way to go. I will have to have my kids give me a few tutorials on how to set them up and where to download music. I will do some of it from the CD's I have since my wife does that with her player.

It will be nice to get only the songs you like to listen too. Time to come into the 21st century. <img src="images/smilies/wink.gif" border="0" alt="" title="Wink" class="inlineimg" />
 
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<img src="images/misc/quote_icon.png" alt="Quote" /> Originally Posted by <strong>Jim Smyth</strong>
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<div class="message">I started out with 8 tracks if that tells you anything. I just within the last 2 years through a box of 100+ 8 tracks out. Then the next big thing was cassettes. Still got a few hundred of them in stock. Then next came CD's. I also have hundreds of them. I figured with my age and not wanting to learn more things I would stick with CD's. But after looking up the MP3 players that were linked here it seems the way to go. I will have to have my kids give me a few tutorials on how to set them up and where to download music. I will do some of it from the CD's I have since my wife does that with her player.

It will be nice to get only the songs you like to listen too. Time to come into the 21st century. <img src="images/smilies/wink.gif" border="0" alt="" title="Wink" class="inlineimg" /></div>

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</div>I've been down the same road as you. Started out with an 8 Track in one of my first cars and still have the radio that used them up on a shelf in my garage. <img src="images/smilies/wink.gif" border="0" alt="" title="Wink" class="inlineimg" /> And I'll 'never' get rid of my old 45 record collection, but that's a whole different story, lol! <img src="images/smilies/grin.gif" border="0" alt="" title="big grin" class="inlineimg" /><br />
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You'll definitely enjoy the flexibility of an MP3 unit. As you mentioned, you can add the songs 'you' like! All I have on my thumb drive that plugs into the MP3 player are my favorite 50's and 60's songs. It's great! <img src="images/smilies/thumbup.gif" border="0" alt="" title="ThumbUp" class="inlineimg" />
 
Interesting as we "oldsters" look back on this. I too started out with 8 Tracks,but then went to 7 in reel to reel tape decks, THEN spent dozens of hours actually converting them to cassettes. Now I've converted all my 45's to MP3's, and my cassettes to MP3's. I have hundreds of hours of 7 in. tape of stations were in the Cincinnati market from the mid 1960's to mid 70's and have worked with a friend of mine to convert all these to MP3 format. The tapes alone take up more than 3 Gigs. I don't put these on my Ipod that I use on the Trike, but I do have around 1800 oldies on it that I listen to regularly. This new technology sure saves space and time, and the quality of song is so much better than those records we listened to.
 
OK, you "oldsters" who started out with '8-tracks', my early hot rod was equiped with a 4-track player first. Then I was in hog heaven when I later got a 4-track/8-track player - that was the state of the art.

Now I have a small portable XM receiver that I move from trike to trike when I ride. It transmits via an FM signal which allows me to received wirelessly thru my helmet headphones. And also works with my Scala communitcators wirelessly when my wife and I ride together. I've got music and the Scala system mutes the music when she talks - just like being at home!!
 

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