350z navigation install?
#21
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I can't remember exactly, but it was in the neighborhood of $1,200. It wasn't cheap to go the route I went, but it is still cheaper than trying to put an OEM nav into a car that didn't come with it.
Here is the link for my write up. It lists all the pieces that I used. You can check out a site like Crutchfield.com to get an idea of how much each piece would cost.
I would strongly recommend you go with a set up that puts the navigation in the upper console as opposed to replacing the Bose with a double din unit that has navigation built in. You will be much happier, and safer, by having the navigation screen higher up. This way you don't have to take your eyes off the road as much.
BTW, you already have met at least 3 of the heavy hitters of the Audio forum in this thread (Kal_El, Spike and THEDUKE). Listen to them and you can't go wrong! Keep searching the Audio forum and you will get a ton of great ideas.
Here is the link for my write up. It lists all the pieces that I used. You can check out a site like Crutchfield.com to get an idea of how much each piece would cost.
I would strongly recommend you go with a set up that puts the navigation in the upper console as opposed to replacing the Bose with a double din unit that has navigation built in. You will be much happier, and safer, by having the navigation screen higher up. This way you don't have to take your eyes off the road as much.
BTW, you already have met at least 3 of the heavy hitters of the Audio forum in this thread (Kal_El, Spike and THEDUKE). Listen to them and you can't go wrong! Keep searching the Audio forum and you will get a ton of great ideas.
Last edited by JEKL; 10-04-2009 at 06:26 AM.
#23
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You didn’t mention your budget, but you did say you want to keep your Bose system in place.
As Jekl1000 says, the Z’s OEM Bose system isn’t very good, but replacing this is not cheap.
Here is another solution using Kenwood that provides great navigation. It isn’t nearly as elegant as Jekl1000’s installation, but it costs less (you can do it for <$600 if you shop carefully).
Note: This solution adds navigation that is independent of your car’s BOSE CES so you won’t have voice guidance coming through your car’s speakers, but instead the voice is delivered through a speaker on the Kenwood LCD (that can sound “muffled” and you don’t have muting on the car’s speakers while the navigation speaker issues it’s voice guidance).
This solution uses two Kenwood pieces:
1. Kenwood LZ-702W Touchscreen Monitor
The LCD screen installs easily in the upper/forward cubby of the 2003 Z. You won’t need to do any custom fabrication since it’s literally a drop-in installation. All you do is unscrew the rear pocket and use the same screws to fix the screen in place.
The LZ-702W Touchscreen Monitor has a hideaway box where you make you connections. It fits well in either the large compartment behind the driver’s seat or in the large glove box behind the passenger seat. Since you have the OEM Bose (and it’s Subw is behind the driver’s seat), you would put the -702W Touchscreen Monitor’s hideaway box inside the large glove box behind the passenger seat.
2. Kenwood KNA-G510 Navigation Box
Install this in one of the small upper cubby slots behind the driver or passenger seat.
Done! I mention this solution since it’s not expensive, and easy to install. The caveat is that it isn’t integrated into your car’s CES.
Jekl1000’s wonderful KOS installation is much better since it’s integrated and scalable (you can add any number of various components). If this fits your budget, I'd go with the KOS system (what Jekl1000 did).
--Spike
As Jekl1000 says, the Z’s OEM Bose system isn’t very good, but replacing this is not cheap.
Here is another solution using Kenwood that provides great navigation. It isn’t nearly as elegant as Jekl1000’s installation, but it costs less (you can do it for <$600 if you shop carefully).
Note: This solution adds navigation that is independent of your car’s BOSE CES so you won’t have voice guidance coming through your car’s speakers, but instead the voice is delivered through a speaker on the Kenwood LCD (that can sound “muffled” and you don’t have muting on the car’s speakers while the navigation speaker issues it’s voice guidance).
This solution uses two Kenwood pieces:
1. Kenwood LZ-702W Touchscreen Monitor
The LCD screen installs easily in the upper/forward cubby of the 2003 Z. You won’t need to do any custom fabrication since it’s literally a drop-in installation. All you do is unscrew the rear pocket and use the same screws to fix the screen in place.
The LZ-702W Touchscreen Monitor has a hideaway box where you make you connections. It fits well in either the large compartment behind the driver’s seat or in the large glove box behind the passenger seat. Since you have the OEM Bose (and it’s Subw is behind the driver’s seat), you would put the -702W Touchscreen Monitor’s hideaway box inside the large glove box behind the passenger seat.
2. Kenwood KNA-G510 Navigation Box
Install this in one of the small upper cubby slots behind the driver or passenger seat.
Done! I mention this solution since it’s not expensive, and easy to install. The caveat is that it isn’t integrated into your car’s CES.
Jekl1000’s wonderful KOS installation is much better since it’s integrated and scalable (you can add any number of various components). If this fits your budget, I'd go with the KOS system (what Jekl1000 did).
--Spike
#25
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The 06+ was more involved because the nav bezels did not have a door so you had to buy an entire new bezel figure out a way to fill where the nav controls would normally go.
#26
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Here is Paul350Z's great thread that describes installing an LCD screen in the 2003's cubby (lots of instruction and pictures).
https://my350z.com/forum/audio-build...tallation.html
--Spike
#28
New Member
However, the Farenheit LCD remote screen (regular LCD or touch-screen) will display GPS images if the GPS device supports sending its video to a composite NTSC or PAL screen.
That means you can connect a Farenheit LCD remote screen to a device such as the Garmin GVN53 using a composite video connector. You won’t have touch-screen function with this arrangement (the Garmin GVN53 uses and RF handheld controller), but using the Garmin’s handheld controller, you can operate your GPS while viewing the video image on your Farenheit screen. It works just great as a GPS device, but doesn’t support touch-screen function.
I really like RF controllers since they do not require precise pointing at a receiver (as is the case with IR controllers).
Let me know if that doesn’t answer your question.
--Spike
#30
New Member
^^ Don’t mention it. Here’s some more info.
The components you need for this installation:
Garmin GVN53 Black Box Navigation
Farenheit 7” LCD Monitor
And… What it looks like mounted in the upper/forward cubby (the GPS is in “night-time” mode which is an inverted background for better viewing at night).
Additional Notes:
1) These are the same model 7” LCD screen, just different brand names:
Farenheit T-7001MHR
Farenheit T-7000MHR
Power Acoustik PT-700MHR
NESA Vision NSM-7005 7" MONITOR
The size of the screen (including its enclosure) is (177.8mm W x 127mm H x22.8mm D). That dimension fits the upper/forward cubby in your 2003 Z perfectly. You mount it there by simply removing the rear pocket in the upper/forward cubby and replace this with the screen. You can even use the same screws that hold the rear pocket. I only used the screws (I didn’t add adhesive or anything else to hold the screen), and my screen has been perfectly secure for 5 years now.
Paul350Z posted an excellent thread that describes mounting this dimension screen in a 2003 Z:
https://my350z.com/forum/audio-build...tallation.html
2) The Garmin GVN53 is very simple to install. I placed mine in the small upper rear cubby behind the driver’s seat. It fits perfectly there.
3) The wiring is simple.
Connect the Yellow RCA composite video wire (a single wire) to the LCD.
Connect the Red power line to an ACC switched power source.
Connect the Black ground to the car’s chassis.
Connect the White RCA Audio left to your H/U’s AUX left sound input.
Connect the Red RCA Audio right to your H/U’s AUX right sound input.
Connect the Blue Audio Mute wire to your H/U (if your H/U supports muting).
There are 5 more wires that have optional connections (2 that are used to connect an optional remote speaker if you do not want to connect the GVN53 to your H/U’s AUX, and three others to connect to an optional harness that supports RGB monitors).
There is no silly parking brake wire. If you have a passenger onboard, let this person operate the GPS using the RF remote control. You don’t need to be stopped with the parking brake engaged to operste this GPS. Nice!
Caveats
1) The system outlined above does not support touch-screen function. If you want touch-screen function, you need the Kenwood KNA-G510 Navigation Box and the Kenwood LZ-702W Touch-screen Monitor (which also fit perfectly into you 2003 Z, and are easily installed).
2) If you wire the sound to your car’s H/U AUX, then you cannot listen to your car’s CES while listening to the GPS’s voice guidance. There is a way to do this, but that’s another story best left to a separate posting/explanation. You can connect the optional speaker to the Garmin GVN 53 GPS, but it might be over-powered for good/clear listening unless your H/U supports muting (there is a mute wire on the Garmin GVN 53 is your H/U supports this).
Summary
I believe the description above is the least costly GPS solution for the 350 Z if you want a fixed 7” LCD screen in the upper/forward cubby. It provides great GPS function and the best viewing angle you can get in the Z.
You can do nearly the same thing with Kenwood components (also OEM Garmin for GPS) and get touch-screen function if you are willing to pay a little more $$.
--Spike
The components you need for this installation:
Garmin GVN53 Black Box Navigation
Farenheit 7” LCD Monitor
And… What it looks like mounted in the upper/forward cubby (the GPS is in “night-time” mode which is an inverted background for better viewing at night).
Additional Notes:
1) These are the same model 7” LCD screen, just different brand names:
Farenheit T-7001MHR
Farenheit T-7000MHR
Power Acoustik PT-700MHR
NESA Vision NSM-7005 7" MONITOR
The size of the screen (including its enclosure) is (177.8mm W x 127mm H x22.8mm D). That dimension fits the upper/forward cubby in your 2003 Z perfectly. You mount it there by simply removing the rear pocket in the upper/forward cubby and replace this with the screen. You can even use the same screws that hold the rear pocket. I only used the screws (I didn’t add adhesive or anything else to hold the screen), and my screen has been perfectly secure for 5 years now.
Paul350Z posted an excellent thread that describes mounting this dimension screen in a 2003 Z:
https://my350z.com/forum/audio-build...tallation.html
2) The Garmin GVN53 is very simple to install. I placed mine in the small upper rear cubby behind the driver’s seat. It fits perfectly there.
3) The wiring is simple.
Connect the Yellow RCA composite video wire (a single wire) to the LCD.
Connect the Red power line to an ACC switched power source.
Connect the Black ground to the car’s chassis.
Connect the White RCA Audio left to your H/U’s AUX left sound input.
Connect the Red RCA Audio right to your H/U’s AUX right sound input.
Connect the Blue Audio Mute wire to your H/U (if your H/U supports muting).
There are 5 more wires that have optional connections (2 that are used to connect an optional remote speaker if you do not want to connect the GVN53 to your H/U’s AUX, and three others to connect to an optional harness that supports RGB monitors).
There is no silly parking brake wire. If you have a passenger onboard, let this person operate the GPS using the RF remote control. You don’t need to be stopped with the parking brake engaged to operste this GPS. Nice!
Caveats
1) The system outlined above does not support touch-screen function. If you want touch-screen function, you need the Kenwood KNA-G510 Navigation Box and the Kenwood LZ-702W Touch-screen Monitor (which also fit perfectly into you 2003 Z, and are easily installed).
2) If you wire the sound to your car’s H/U AUX, then you cannot listen to your car’s CES while listening to the GPS’s voice guidance. There is a way to do this, but that’s another story best left to a separate posting/explanation. You can connect the optional speaker to the Garmin GVN 53 GPS, but it might be over-powered for good/clear listening unless your H/U supports muting (there is a mute wire on the Garmin GVN 53 is your H/U supports this).
Summary
I believe the description above is the least costly GPS solution for the 350 Z if you want a fixed 7” LCD screen in the upper/forward cubby. It provides great GPS function and the best viewing angle you can get in the Z.
You can do nearly the same thing with Kenwood components (also OEM Garmin for GPS) and get touch-screen function if you are willing to pay a little more $$.
--Spike
#33
New Member
^^ I don’t have experience with a 2008, but I see no reason why this setup would not work. Hopefully someone who has done this will respond.
The LCD monitor is mounted behind the cubby. You need to do some custom fabrication (the 2003 cubby did not require custom fabrication). Any decent shop can do this, and the cost should be minimal. The most challenging part is the cutout and fabricating a hanger that holds the LCD screen.
--Spike
The LCD monitor is mounted behind the cubby. You need to do some custom fabrication (the 2003 cubby did not require custom fabrication). Any decent shop can do this, and the cost should be minimal. The most challenging part is the cutout and fabricating a hanger that holds the LCD screen.
--Spike
#35
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It will... but you may need to do some modifications.
If you go with the Kenwood KOS system, you can integrate this with your existing Bose hardware. In fact the Kenwood KOS System is designed to integrate with just about any existing car CES.
If you install an aftermarket double din H/U, you will need to install an adapter. Search here for all the information you need to accomplish this.
--Spike
If you go with the Kenwood KOS system, you can integrate this with your existing Bose hardware. In fact the Kenwood KOS System is designed to integrate with just about any existing car CES.
If you install an aftermarket double din H/U, you will need to install an adapter. Search here for all the information you need to accomplish this.
--Spike
#36
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07 Altima oem nav in double din slot 350z
It will... but you may need to do some modifications.
If you go with the Kenwood KOS system, you can integrate this with your existing Bose hardware. In fact the Kenwood KOS System is designed to integrate with just about any existing car CES.
If you install an aftermarket double din H/U, you will need to install an adapter. Search here for all the information you need to accomplish this.
--Spike
If you go with the Kenwood KOS system, you can integrate this with your existing Bose hardware. In fact the Kenwood KOS System is designed to integrate with just about any existing car CES.
If you install an aftermarket double din H/U, you will need to install an adapter. Search here for all the information you need to accomplish this.
--Spike
#37
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Are you looking for an OEM navigation solution? I've got mine laying around somewhere if youre looking for an OEM setup ... hell, I think I have the wiring too - I believe I have everything.
Last edited by bealljk; 06-29-2019 at 08:42 PM.
#38
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That would be sweet man. Mines an 04.5 so the center dash is black. I was mainly looking for an oem look and the possibility of wiring up the aux port. It’s a pain on a radio without the option.
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06-03-2021 10:05 AM
2007, 350z, 370z, aftermarket, din, dvd, factory, gps, install, installing, navigation, rear, removal, speaker, unit