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I'm oblivious .. I never thought about it, of course its got a CD Player .. NOT !! I'm pretty sure my 16' had one ..?? I assumed my 17' Platinum had one .. IDK, but my 19' King Ranch .. no got, Really ..
Seriously, play your tunes from a stick or your phone. I'm an old guy and haven't used a CD in a car in at least 10 years. They have gone the way of the 8-track.
I'm oblivious .. I never thought about it, of course its got a CD Player .. NOT !! I'm pretty sure my 16' had one ..?? I assumed my 17' Platinum had one .. IDK, but my 19' King Ranch .. no got, Really ..
CD players from the factory are on their way out and I’d say they’ll be totally eliminated within the next year or two in every make and model vehicle.
CD players from the factory are on their way out and I’d say they’ll be totally eliminated within the next year or two in every make and model vehicle.
Mechless AM H/U's had taken over the market years ago. The OEM suppliers are the only ones still trying to get rid of them. 👍
There was a record player available at one time for cars. It was prone to skipping over rough terrain. They didn't sell very many. My slick had a 4 Track player when I bought it, which I didn't even know had existed. I remember 8 Tracks. *click*, they were cool if only because it was basically the only way to play your own tunes on the road. Casette tapes came later, the format was envisioned as a dictation (voice only) media. I think there was another short lived format or two somewhere in there, Elcassette or something like that.
Did Reel to Reel ever make it to car based audio? CDs were yet another format. The hot setup was 200 disc player carousel installed in the car trunk. VHS video tape actually worked excellent for HI-FI audio recording and playback purposes due to the effective tape speed due to the spinning head. I don't care what happens next format wise, most "music" today sucks pretty badly, and I've heard the old hits 40 gazillion times. I can store way more tunes than I'd ever want on a smartphone without breaking a sweat.
Rezvani's Latest Post-Apocalyptic Monster Is a Ford F-150 Raptor Underneath
Slideshow: Called the Fortress, the 850-horsepower pickup combines Raptor underpinnings with military-inspired features, survival equipment, and a starting price of $285,000.