What's "hu"? You wrote, "hu wires" and I'm just wondering what it means. So your saying that if i unhook the factory speaker grounds and just leave the speaker positive connected it might produce sound?
There is no remote on and off from the factory wiring to the aftermarket radio. The modules(radio, amp,dvd etc) turns on and off by means of communications through the CAN bus system. This is where the aftermarket CAN bus interface is needed to fool the factory system and send a signal to the dominant module which in this case, TIPM(tottaly integrated power module). In turn, this module will communicate to the amplifier(if equipped) to turn on via CAN bus communications. Without the interface, there will be a language barrier between the aftermarket unit and the CAN Bus units within the network of modules.
Seems like his after market wiring harness adapter would have taken care of this. Like I stated in another post...." it would be going back to the "professionals" who installed it and they would be fixing it". I am going to bow out of this one now, steel, you have just gone over my head. Hope I have not caused any harm.
HU is Head unit (the radio). No you cannot only hook up the pos wire to the speakers. They have to be grounded some way to the body.
I think your problem lies in the amp not coming on. You need to check the wiring schematics that steelheadz has posted and find the remote wire to the amp and wire it to the remote wire on the hu. This wire from the radio is usually blue and will have power on it when you turn the radio on. the radio "remotely" turns on the amp, that is why it is called the remote wire. In the old days this wire was used to raise the power antennae. This blue wire coming from the radio will signal the amp to come on. I don't know which wire runs to the amp but it should be on the plug that used to plug into the back of your factory radio that your adapter now plugs into. It will be one of the wires that now has nothing running to it, or the new adapter plug has not addressed.
Check the plug that used to plug into the back of your radio and ask yourself "what wire is not running to something now with the new plug". That wire will probably go to the amp remote. Check that result with the wiring schematics to doublecheck. If you feel confident you have the amp remote wire, hook it to the blue remote wire on the radio.
Good luck and keep us posted.
Edit: From looking at the schematic above, It looks like the amp will be powered by a yellow wire with a red stripe on it. Find that wire going into the amp. With everything turned on see if that wire has power.If it does than your main power to the amp is good, but there should also be a remote wire as mentioned above. I just don't see it in the schematic.
You did not sound harsh at all, but a can bus is above my skill level. Besides I never smoked the stuff.:lol:No harm done, i'm simply just trying to clarify how it's suppose to work properly. I'm not here to confront or single out any individuals or to prove anyone wrong but instead correct something that might go wrong at someone else's expense. I apologize if i sounded or seem to be a jerk on how i responded on the post. I've seen these headaches and frustrations from my personnal experience and knowing how it functions and it's design structure, i simply just wanted to help.
There is no remote on and off from the factory wiring to the aftermarket radio. The modules(radio, amp,dvd etc) turns on and off by means of communications through the CAN bus system. This is where the aftermarket CAN bus interface is needed to fool the factory system and send a signal to the dominant module which in this case, TIPM(tottaly integrated power module). In turn, this module will communicate to the amplifier(if equipped) to turn on via CAN bus communications. Without the interface, there will be a language barrier between the aftermarket unit and the CAN Bus units within the network of modules.