Colours — Ford 6000cd Wiring
To bypass this, you need a specific "CAN Bus Simulator" box—or you simply cut your losses and buy the £5 wiring adapter that does the thinking for you. You might be tempted to snip the Ford quadlock plug off and start twisting wires together with electrical tape. Stop. Don't do it.
| Function | Wire Colour | The "Gotcha" | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Black | Standard. The only easy one. | | Constant 12V (Memory) | Yellow / Violet | Not Yellow alone. It has a violet stripe. Lose this, lose your presets. | | Switched 12V (Ignition) | Blue / Red | This is the weird one. Ford uses a blue wire with a red stripe for "turn on." Most people mistake it for an amp remote. | | Illumination (Dimmer) | Blue / Orange | Tells the radio to dim the display when you turn on headlights. | | Amp Remote (Power Antenna) | Blue / White | Only used if you have an external factory subwoofer. | Ford 6000cd Wiring Colours
If you must go DIY, remember: That is a fire waiting to happen. The Verdict The Ford 6000CD is a brilliant piece of 2000s engineering—good sound, reliable, and stylish for its era. Its wiring is not difficult; it's just different. Treat the colours with respect, map them twice, and you’ll have that retro stereo purring in no time. To bypass this, you need a specific "CAN
And if you get frustrated? Just remember: somewhere in a Ford factory in 2005, an engineer chose Blue/Red for ignition specifically to confuse future DIY mechanics. You are not paranoid. You are correct. Don't do it
You need to talk to the wires. And Ford, being Ford, didn’t use the universal ISO standard colour scheme everyone else adopted. They used their own rainbow.