Lainey2k1 Posted December 21, 2017 Share Posted December 21, 2017 I’ve got a 1995 Subaru legacy L wagon that I purchased to replace my 1997 Outback. Well–actually it was meant to replace my 1997 mustang so we could sell it, but the timing belt went on the Outback and… Interference engine. Yay. Anyhow, I pulled the car stereo from the Outback before it went to the junkyard with the intention of replacing the stereo in the legacy with it. I first went to replace it last week, thinking it should be a simple,matter of pulling the old one from the factory harness and plugging in my replacement. Put it all back together, easy peasy. Except when I pulled the existing head unit, I discovered that the installer of the previous stereo may have been jack the ripper, as he cut the factory harness out and direct wired the harness for the crappy Panasonic that was in there when I bought it.knowing this would require more parts than I had, I slapped everything back in while ordering parts, only now the head unit inexplicably wouldn’t turn on, and my power lock and dome light stopped working. After screwing with it a bit, I found a yellow wire on the stereo harness that was stripped but loose, and I couldn’t figure out where it had come from. The Panasonic harness had two yellows, for what reason I couldn’t determine, but after a long series of tests, I somehow plugged it into a secondary plug that was unused that made it so the radio/locks/lights worked when the car was running, but didn’t when it was off. So the yellow clearly needed to be wired to the constant 12v. Great, should be easy to fix. My parts came, including a new reverse harness that I tediously wired back into the dash, and a harness to attach to the Panasonic for when I turn around and resell this car, which I made sure to hook both yellows to the constant wire on the harness. In wiring everything in, I ran into a snag–the constant 12v wire color according to my Haynes manual should be red/yellow, according do a site on the web, it should be red-green. Problem being, neither of those colors are showing up in my cluster of wires. There’s a yellow wire in the cluster that I assumed to be the constant, but once wired in neither stereo is working. On top of all of this, I thought back on my Outback’s stereo install, which was a minor nightmare for a fire timer, which mysteriously also didn’t turn on at first. What’s interesting with that is, the unit I was replacing in the Outback was the factory tape deck-cd player double bay special, and for,whatever reason, it the aftermarket stereo only fired up when the smaller auxiliary plug was plugged into the factory cd unit. I never figured out why, but rolled around in that car for several years with a useless CD player instead of opting for another alcove for coffee punch cards. All this to say, I feel like these things are all connected, but I can’t figure out how. Has anyone else run across this in the past? (and before anyone asks--I checked the fuses. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Fairtax4me Posted December 21, 2017 Share Posted December 21, 2017 Why are you assuming which wire is which? KNOW what each wire does... Get a multimeter and check for voltage. You know what they say about assuming... Haynes manual wire diagrams are junk. Get a factory service manual for it and use the wire diagram in that. They're available for free in Google-land if you look in the right place. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lainey2k1 Posted December 21, 2017 Author Share Posted December 21, 2017 As far as free factory manuals go, do you have a source you use? Most of what I've found were scams trying to skim credit card info. I'll check the multimeter--since I was rewiring based on the prior stereos direct wired harness (with the exception of the unknown wire), I didn't bother at that point. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heartless Posted December 21, 2017 Share Posted December 21, 2017 i use this one a lot - it does go down periodically (funding issues, perhaps?) http://jdmfsm.info/Auto/Japan/Subaru/ this is another one specific for 95 Legacy: http://www.mediafire.com/file/s3lyjha4hvfvrgj/USDM+Legacy+FSM+1995+%28BD-BG-BK%29.zip 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike104 Posted December 22, 2017 Share Posted December 22, 2017 (edited) Check this out for Subaru Radio Harness Pin Outs http://ae64.com/ I usually buy a Metra harness and connect it to the new head unit harness then it's an easy connection to the factory Subaru Connector. But some don't want to spend an extra $10 to get the Metra harness (connects to Subaru Factory connector and you can wire it to the new head unit harness). This for the 95 & Up Legacy http://ae64.com/Legacy-pinout.htm Edited December 22, 2017 by Mike104 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lainey2k1 Posted December 22, 2017 Author Share Posted December 22, 2017 Thanks for the tip, Heartless! Mike--that's exactly what I'm installing. And that chart is exactly what I needed. Thank you! 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lmdew Posted December 24, 2017 Share Posted December 24, 2017 All of the lights you listed get their ground through the radio harness. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lainey2k1 Posted December 24, 2017 Author Share Posted December 24, 2017 Okay, everything is fixed. After ensuring the wiring harness was hooked up correctly, it still wasn't working. I started checking my power sources and found my accessory power was working, but the constant was only getting.08 volts. I eventually tracked the problem back to the relay fuse box, where I found the previous owner had dropped a 5 Amp fuse into a 15 Amp circuit. Once I replaced that fuse, everything was fine. 2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heartless Posted December 24, 2017 Share Posted December 24, 2017 Glad to hear you got it sorted out, and thanks for letting us know spending a couple of extra bucks on the harness adapter is sooo much better than doing a hack job on a car's wiring. Drives me nuts that people refuse to do it the right way. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Lainey2k1 Posted December 24, 2017 Author Share Posted December 24, 2017 Yeah. I used the opportunity to improve the wiring job I did when I didn't know any better. I actually used crimp nuts instead of just twisting wire and wrapping it in electrical tape. (I was young and stupid then. ????) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
heartless Posted December 26, 2017 Share Posted December 26, 2017 to be honest - I don't like crimp nuts, either. LOL I use heat-shrink myself. do a western union splice, with heat-shrink over it, never have another problem. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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