<blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><hr>Originally posted by Jon12:
If your car has a positive ground why couldn't you hook up the pos. to ground and neg to pos.?
Sorry about the stupid question, Jon<hr></blockquote>
Jon,
On most available modern electronic devices they are setup for negative ground. This means that the metal radio chassis (can) is permanently connected to the negative power terminal of the radio.
If you tried to install this radio in a positive ground car which has a hot negative terminal, there would be a direct short circuit from the neg. battery supply terminal thru the metal radio can to the positive side of the battery.
There are a couple of ways around this. One is to insulate all of the radio metal from ground (the car metal) with insulated radio mounting hardware. This still presents the problem of having the antenna shield connected to the wrong polarity. With this method it is very easy for the metal radio chassis (can) to become accidentally grounded & burn something up.
The second method uses an electronic, transformer isolated DC to DC converter which effectively reverses the battery pos & neg connections to the radio & prevents problems.
Lastly, many people convert the car from positive ground to negative ground so that all modern negative ground accessories may be connected without problems.
D