Strange issue first noticed yesterday with my (Toyota) JBL audio system. Started the vehicle and radio comes on which is set to an FM station and it sounds normal. I put it in reverse and back up about 30 feet, and suddenly it sounds like broken up reception from that station. Very rapid "machine gun" of intermittent sound, but I can still recognize the song. When the car stops moving, the sound returns to normal.
So I put it in drive and proceed to my front gate, and again it sounds like the bad reception while I'm slowly driving forward. I change the channel and find it's not the station because other channels are also delivering intermittent sound. When I stop the car again at the gate, sound returns to normal.
This pattern continued as I went down the street. Eventually I switched to the CD player and heard the same crappy sound while the car was moving, but clear normal sound while the car was stopped.
Later when I was stopped, I put the car in park and hit the gas several times revving the engine and the stereo sounded normal. As soon as I start moving again, even 2 or 3 MPH on a smooth road the intermittent broken up sound kicks right in.
Does anyone have some diagnostic techniques to suggest that hopefully don't include dismantling door panels or removing the stereo from the dash?
Thanks,
Wolf
So I put it in drive and proceed to my front gate, and again it sounds like the bad reception while I'm slowly driving forward. I change the channel and find it's not the station because other channels are also delivering intermittent sound. When I stop the car again at the gate, sound returns to normal.
This pattern continued as I went down the street. Eventually I switched to the CD player and heard the same crappy sound while the car was moving, but clear normal sound while the car was stopped.
Later when I was stopped, I put the car in park and hit the gas several times revving the engine and the stereo sounded normal. As soon as I start moving again, even 2 or 3 MPH on a smooth road the intermittent broken up sound kicks right in.
Does anyone have some diagnostic techniques to suggest that hopefully don't include dismantling door panels or removing the stereo from the dash?
Thanks,
Wolf