+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 10 of 10

Hyundai: Ping Hyundaitech

  1. #1
    stickafoleyinem
    Guest

    Ping Hyundaitech

    Thank you for all the help you have given us on this newsgroup. You've been
    a great asset to all us Hyundai owners.

    I would like to ask you about my 03 Elantra's AM radio. Like others, my
    reception is practically zilch. I live in a major urban area and listening
    is like trying to pull in a station from 150 miles away. I like AM radio and
    have no plans to go elsewhere on the band. But do you know what the cause is
    of this problems which I and many others experience? Can it be fixed? Will
    my dealer address this problem as its still under the 1 year warranty for
    such matters.

    Thanks



  2. #2
    Rachel
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    Just take it to the dealer and tell them it's not working, they will either
    fix it under warranty or give you some BS reason why it doesn't work.


    "stickafoleyinem" <com> wrote in message
    news:net... 
    been 
    and 
    is 



  3. #3
    hyundaitech
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    If there's something actually wrong, it'll be covered by the 3/36 warranty
    on the radio or the 5/60 bumper to bumper warranty on everything else. I
    don't listen to AM that much, so I don't know much more than what's been
    posted here. A poor antenna connection will easily cause what you've
    described. I suspect, however, that based on the number of statements on
    this newsgroup, that this is simply the way the system is, and there is no
    defective component. I can't recommend anything more than taking it to
    the dealer and having them look at it.


  4. #4
    stickafoleyinem
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    Thanks Hyundai tech. The FM is doing well, so I doubt the antenna has a bad
    connection. It looks like I'm going shopping for a radio. I live news,
    sports, and talk and its located on AM.



  5. #5
    Jon
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    Hi, Just a quick question. I, too, have noticed a loss in AM
    reception. If the antenna is the problem, will it make a difference in
    reception on AM, even with a new radio?

    J.W.





    On Mon, 19 Jul 2004 16:12:25 -0700, "stickafoleyinem"
    <com> wrote:
     


  6. #6
    Brian
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    The problem is more likely to be that the radio has a poor quality AM
    tuner section. One possible fix might be to buy a better AM radio (not
    necessarily a car model) and patch it into the existing antenna with a
    splitter.

    Jon W. wrote: 


  7. #7
    hyundaitech
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    I wouldn't give up on the radio if it hasn't been checked. I suspect
    you're right, but putting in a new radio if the antenna is your problem
    won't improve anything. Although counterintuitive, I've seen the loose
    antenna wire cause a major problem on AM but almost none on FM. GM had a
    problem with antenna wires pulling apart on some of their late 90's N-body
    cars that would cause the exact condition you describe.


  8. #8
    hyundaitech
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    A bad antenna will affect any radio to which it is connected.


  9. #9
    nothermark
    Guest

    Re: Ping Hyundaitech

    On Tue, 20 Jul 2004 12:24:18 -0400, "hyundaitech"
    <hotmail.com> wrote:
     

    It's not counter intuitive. The frequencies involved are quite
    different - roughly 1 MHz vs 100MHz. The higher the frequency the
    shorter the antenna. A broken stub might well work at 100 but be way
    too short at 1. AM car radio antenna length is way short to begin
    with but is compensated for with circuitry in the radio.

    As a quck check I would connect another car radio, tweak the AM
    antenna adjustment and try it in the car. YMMV. ;-)

    While I am at it - Unless one is looking at high dollar specialty
    communications gear it is unlikey a non car radio will have the noise
    suppression and proper antenna matching to work in a car.

  10. #10
    Jim
    Guest

    Ping Hyundaitech

    Just a follow-up and a THANK YOU.

    Some months ago, I posted some codes I received from my local parts store
    concerning a "hard shift" transmission problem (and associated Check Engine
    light) with my Santa Fe.

    You gave me a couple of suggestions on which sensors needed replacement.

    Well, I took a copy of my posting and your response to my local mechanic and
    he said he'd give it a try so ordered the parts.

    He discovered that one of the sensors was located underneath the battery. I
    had replaced that battery a couple of week prior to this because it just
    died. What I didn't know is that my old battery (which was not the original
    but a cheap replacement) had a leak, dripped on the sensor and ate it up!

    He replaced that eaten-up sensor as well as another one that you suggested
    and, a measly $130.00 later, my car is like new again and my faith in the
    quality of Hyundai cars is restored.

    Thank you!

    --
    Jim Fisher




 

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.6.0

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48