Control your stereo with your Tiptronic steering wheel buttons
#1
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Control your stereo with your Tiptronic steering wheel buttons
I actually did this a few months ago and am finally get around to doing a write up.
I did a 3-spoke 996 wheel conversion several years ago (Click Here for that thread) and always wondered if I could use the buttons on a Tiptronic wheel to control my stereo. Came across a good deal on a Tip wheel and decided to go for it and it works great.
Here's the DIY:
1) You need a receiver that uses an IR remote
2) I bought a little box that is basically a learning remote. It's made by Pacific Stereo and is called the PAC SWI-X
3) I added resistors (4 different values, included with PAC SWI-X) to the wires coming off the Tip buttons
4) The Tip wires get wired directly to the PAC SWI-X
5) You go through a programming routine where you press the button on the steering wheel and then press the corresponding button on the IR remote, which teaches the PAC SWIX what IR command to transmit when you press the steering wheel button
6) My stereo has an IR receiver on the front of the deck and a remote IR eyeball. I used the eyeball and mounted it up under the dash with the IR transmitter pointed at it.
7) Voila! steering wheel control
8) Right now I have volume up and down on the right side and track forward and backward on the left side. You can actually get more controls by pushing two buttons at once, say the top buttons on both sides but it's a little finicky.
Stuff you need:
1) Tiptronic 996/986 steering wheel
2) Tiptronic clock spring
3) Tiptronic wire extension (you could wire this with your own but having the right connectors was nice)
4) PAC SWIX
5) A receiver with an IR remote input
Buttons:
I wanted the graphics on the buttons to correspond to the buttons on the remote. I used Testor's clear decal paper to print my own graphics on my inkjet printer. Decided to paint the buttons with silver wheel paint to match some of the other bits in my interior. Affixed the decals and then clearcoated the buttons.
And here's what it looks like:
I did a 3-spoke 996 wheel conversion several years ago (Click Here for that thread) and always wondered if I could use the buttons on a Tiptronic wheel to control my stereo. Came across a good deal on a Tip wheel and decided to go for it and it works great.
Here's the DIY:
1) You need a receiver that uses an IR remote
2) I bought a little box that is basically a learning remote. It's made by Pacific Stereo and is called the PAC SWI-X
3) I added resistors (4 different values, included with PAC SWI-X) to the wires coming off the Tip buttons
4) The Tip wires get wired directly to the PAC SWI-X
5) You go through a programming routine where you press the button on the steering wheel and then press the corresponding button on the IR remote, which teaches the PAC SWIX what IR command to transmit when you press the steering wheel button
6) My stereo has an IR receiver on the front of the deck and a remote IR eyeball. I used the eyeball and mounted it up under the dash with the IR transmitter pointed at it.
7) Voila! steering wheel control
8) Right now I have volume up and down on the right side and track forward and backward on the left side. You can actually get more controls by pushing two buttons at once, say the top buttons on both sides but it's a little finicky.
Stuff you need:
1) Tiptronic 996/986 steering wheel
2) Tiptronic clock spring
3) Tiptronic wire extension (you could wire this with your own but having the right connectors was nice)
4) PAC SWIX
5) A receiver with an IR remote input
Buttons:
I wanted the graphics on the buttons to correspond to the buttons on the remote. I used Testor's clear decal paper to print my own graphics on my inkjet printer. Decided to paint the buttons with silver wheel paint to match some of the other bits in my interior. Affixed the decals and then clearcoated the buttons.
And here's what it looks like:
Last edited by gregeast; 04-29-2012 at 06:24 PM.
#6
Greg, you surely have the nicest looking interior of any 944 I've ever seen, and this latest mod is just fantastic.. Now that I've spent a good 15 min drooling over your car, I've got two questions..?
- Where did you get the carbon inlays.? My old plastic ones are cracked and brittle and needs replacing..
- Which head unit.?
Thanks - Alex.
- Where did you get the carbon inlays.? My old plastic ones are cracked and brittle and needs replacing..
- Which head unit.?
Thanks - Alex.
#7
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Thanks all, it was a fun little project. I have my old non-Tip 3 spoke wheel already modded to fit our cars and the old clock spring available if anyone is interested.
The carbon fiber bits came from Jager Engineering and my head unit is a Blaupunkt Hamburg MP-68.
Paragon has the one touch up and down window controllers. My car has them and I love them, the buttons are in such an awkward place it's nice to tap it once and be done.
The carbon fiber bits came from Jager Engineering and my head unit is a Blaupunkt Hamburg MP-68.
Paragon has the one touch up and down window controllers. My car has them and I love them, the buttons are in such an awkward place it's nice to tap it once and be done.
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#8
Thanks.. I've been looking for a nice clean HU to replace my old one and yours looks just like that, plus that I like Blaupunkts stuff.. I'm onto a winner here I think..
Just one more question then.. Is that your stock shift rod thats modified with another ****, or is it an all together new shifter.? And from where.?
Alex.
Just one more question then.. Is that your stock shift rod thats modified with another ****, or is it an all together new shifter.? And from where.?
Alex.
#11
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#14
Three Wheelin'
Hmm, I was planning something similar only my buttons will be there to adjust boost via EBC.
I'm thinking about ditching the entire radio in this car and hiding a small amp somewhere. I would then use my cellphone as the source. I only ever use the radio on long trips, otherwise the exhaust is the hi-fi.
I'm thinking about ditching the entire radio in this car and hiding a small amp somewhere. I would then use my cellphone as the source. I only ever use the radio on long trips, otherwise the exhaust is the hi-fi.
#15
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That could work, the buttons just make a connection between ground and the output wires. You end up with two wires on the back side of the clock spring, one for '+' and the other for '-'. The two '+' wires for the two buttons merge on the wheel side of the clock spring (as do the two '-' wires of course).
The trick will be providing an input that your EBC can read...and not making a turn into your local McDonald's, accidentally bumping up the boost and launching yourself through the Golden Arches .
The trick will be providing an input that your EBC can read...and not making a turn into your local McDonald's, accidentally bumping up the boost and launching yourself through the Golden Arches .