1. Welcome to Tacoma World!

    You are currently viewing as a guest! To get full-access, you need to register for a FREE account.

    As a registered member, you’ll be able to:
    • Participate in all Tacoma discussion topics
    • Communicate privately with other Tacoma owners from around the world
    • Post your own photos in our Members Gallery
    • Access all special features of the site

Sirius XM Tuner to stock antenna? (2011)

Discussion in 'Audio & Video' started by xguntherc, Dec 29, 2020.

  1. Dec 29, 2020 at 1:29 PM
    #1
    xguntherc

    xguntherc [OP] Taco Time

    Joined:
    Dec 19, 2012
    Member:
    #93383
    Messages:
    1,835
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Cory
    East Dallas
    Vehicle:
    11 TRD Off Road - Black
    Icon Stage 5, Nexen Roadian MTX, Fuel KB43 Block wheels, Baja Design XL 80s, Baja Squad Pro WC fogs, TacoVinyl grill, "dudebro" lights, Prinsu rack, trail rash pinstripes, BAMF hybrid bumper, sliders, and LCA skids, and a few other things I can't think of.
    I have a 2011 TRD OR, originally I had the JBL system installed, but that's long gone.

    Now, I have a Pioneer AVIC-7200NEX that's HDradio, SiriusXM, etc etc etc ready. According to Pioneer, all I needed is the SVX vehicle tuner that connects Sirius to my Pioneer radio.

    So, I plug the Sirius tuner into the back of the Pioneer NEX, then plug the Sirius antenna in and run it to the top of the dash (or out to the roof) for a better signal.

    HOWEVER. I'm wondering if I can just splice into the stock antenna as these trucks come "XM-ready" even back in 2011. I have the shark fin on the back, etc. I'd still be using the Sirius XM SXV300 vehicle tuner, but I'd be using the stock antenna so I don't have to run that stupid square up to my dash.

    Thoughts, advice, input?
     
  2. Dec 29, 2020 at 1:42 PM
    #2
    destin_meeks

    destin_meeks I used to fix people's crappy stereos

    Joined:
    Jul 14, 2017
    Member:
    #223997
    Messages:
    3,933
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Destin
    Tuscaloosa, AL
    Vehicle:
    2017 SSM DoubleCab TRD Off-Road 4x4
    If you actually have the XM antenna connector in the dash, you. Can absolutely use it. In many Toyota’s it’s blue, or a small white connector. Then Maestro makes adapters to convert that over to the plug on the Tuner.
    You do NOT want to try and splice them. Just get the adapter.
     
  3. Dec 29, 2020 at 2:18 PM
    #3
    xguntherc

    xguntherc [OP] Taco Time

    Joined:
    Dec 19, 2012
    Member:
    #93383
    Messages:
    1,835
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Cory
    East Dallas
    Vehicle:
    11 TRD Off Road - Black
    Icon Stage 5, Nexen Roadian MTX, Fuel KB43 Block wheels, Baja Design XL 80s, Baja Squad Pro WC fogs, TacoVinyl grill, "dudebro" lights, Prinsu rack, trail rash pinstripes, BAMF hybrid bumper, sliders, and LCA skids, and a few other things I can't think of.
    Well originally my truck was XM ready, but that's before XM and Sirius merged or whatever. I've read the older Toyota antenna only goes up to channel 300, though.

    So, I'm thinking I might just stop being lazy and do it right. It's literally a $50 tuner I already have sitting next to me. I just need to plug it into the back, then run the Sirius XM antenna up to my dash in the corner. I'd rather not run it outside and put it on the top of the truck, but that's probably the best spot for signal. What ya think @destin_meeks

    To be fair, I already have the same square antenna on my dash in the corner by my windshield for the Pioneer's shitty map and nav system I don't use. lol. It works fine, but I'd rather just Google maps with my phone. Thinking I can mount the XM antenna next to it.
     
  4. Dec 29, 2020 at 3:56 PM
    #4
    destin_meeks

    destin_meeks I used to fix people's crappy stereos

    Joined:
    Jul 14, 2017
    Member:
    #223997
    Messages:
    3,933
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Destin
    Tuscaloosa, AL
    Vehicle:
    2017 SSM DoubleCab TRD Off-Road 4x4
    XM antennas are way more sensitive than GPS antennas (they require a constant connection to a satellite, where gps antennas just need to talk to one every few seconds to update location data)
    So if you put in on the dash and are driving one direction, and the satellite it’s trying to connect to is behind you, it will have a lot of drops until it can find a new satellite to pair to in front of you (because the roof and back wall are metal)
    This is fine on a long straight road, but becomes a huge pain on curvy roads or city driving with any turns.
     
    xguntherc[QUOTED][OP] likes this.
  5. Dec 30, 2020 at 4:52 AM
    #5
    dolbytone

    dolbytone Well-Known Member

    Joined:
    May 14, 2010
    Member:
    #37165
    Messages:
    1,317
    Gender:
    Male
    South Carolina
    Vehicle:
    09 TRD Off Road
    I used the shark fin adapter on my 2009 and have been using the OEM antenna without issue since installing my first aftermarket radio on 2010.

    The channel limitation is not the antenna, it’s the tuner. With the old tuner I was getting the Sirius package which did not have channels over 300. I’ve replaced it now with the current generation SXM tuner and all channels are available using the same antenna.

    When you enter your tuner ID number into the SXM system, your subscription updates your available channels.
     
    xguntherc[QUOTED][OP] likes this.
  6. Dec 30, 2020 at 8:14 AM
    #6
    xguntherc

    xguntherc [OP] Taco Time

    Joined:
    Dec 19, 2012
    Member:
    #93383
    Messages:
    1,835
    Gender:
    Male
    First Name:
    Cory
    East Dallas
    Vehicle:
    11 TRD Off Road - Black
    Icon Stage 5, Nexen Roadian MTX, Fuel KB43 Block wheels, Baja Design XL 80s, Baja Squad Pro WC fogs, TacoVinyl grill, "dudebro" lights, Prinsu rack, trail rash pinstripes, BAMF hybrid bumper, sliders, and LCA skids, and a few other things I can't think of.
    Ah ok. Thanks for the information guys. I went ahead and mounted it to the front center of the roof, by the windshield. Ran it through the weather stripping, down thru the firewall and I'm all good. So far it's pretty awesome, but I'm sad I didn't have the NFL channel. Maybe next year.

    The radio options in Vegas changed recently and are terrible. I offroad constantly and lose service to where my phone apps don't work, and I do a lot of camping, hiking, fishing, or going to my cabin in Utah where there's no service either. Having to switch between radio/device/to the old iPod in the glove box is always a pain, especially while mobbing down a trail avoiding trees and rocks. And the touchscreen is impossible to work with while bouncing around.

    So, now I have SXM to fix most of that. Big trip this weekend so we'll see how it does.
     
    destin_meeks likes this.

Products Discussed in

To Top