Arion
Active member
The question itself is pretty straight forward, but some back story might provide some additional insight. The question: In the photo below, what purpose or purposes does the connector plugged into the left side of the radio serve?
The back story is this: While removing the frunk to replace the fog light bulbs and wimpy OEM horn on our 2012 RT Limited I discovered two unexpected cables going through a grommet in the back wall of the frunk into the interior. When I unzipped the liner I was surprised to discover a Sena SM10 mounted to the rear wall complete with cables for USB power and audio-in. Unfortunately, the paperwork that was included the Spyder, when we bought it from a local dealer, didn't include anything regarding the SM10, and if we hadn't decided to remove the frunk to change bulbs and horn, we would not have known it was there!
The more I thought about it, despite the mounting location, I convinced myself the original owner installed the SM10 to stream the Spyder's stereo through a Bluetooth headset. To test the theory I paired the SM10 to one of our 20S EVO headsets and followed Sena's operating instructions - turn on the 20S EVO, turn on the radio and finally the SM10. Nothing. So I tried several other turn-on sequences and still nothing. To confirm the SM10 and 20S EVO devices were talking to one another I plugged an mp3 player into the SM10 and was rewarded with music through the 20S EVO speakers.
I didn't attempt to trace the cables to their other ends because it appeared major disassembly would be required, but I did access the radio module and, as you can see in the photo, discovered two connectors rather than the single connector on the right side that I expected to find. To try to determine what the function of the left side cable was, I unplugged it to see if it had any impact on the operation the stereo. There was no evident change at all, unless I've overlooked something.
If unplugging the cable doesn't have an adverse effect on the radio's operation, I thought we could order one of Motorcycle Dave's custom SM10 cables, mount the SM10 in the rear trunk per Dave's video, and then my spouse could stream Spyder music to her headset.
However, before ordering the cable, it would be very helpful to know whether the left cable is necessary or not. And thank you for your patience in reading all this!

The back story is this: While removing the frunk to replace the fog light bulbs and wimpy OEM horn on our 2012 RT Limited I discovered two unexpected cables going through a grommet in the back wall of the frunk into the interior. When I unzipped the liner I was surprised to discover a Sena SM10 mounted to the rear wall complete with cables for USB power and audio-in. Unfortunately, the paperwork that was included the Spyder, when we bought it from a local dealer, didn't include anything regarding the SM10, and if we hadn't decided to remove the frunk to change bulbs and horn, we would not have known it was there!
The more I thought about it, despite the mounting location, I convinced myself the original owner installed the SM10 to stream the Spyder's stereo through a Bluetooth headset. To test the theory I paired the SM10 to one of our 20S EVO headsets and followed Sena's operating instructions - turn on the 20S EVO, turn on the radio and finally the SM10. Nothing. So I tried several other turn-on sequences and still nothing. To confirm the SM10 and 20S EVO devices were talking to one another I plugged an mp3 player into the SM10 and was rewarded with music through the 20S EVO speakers.
I didn't attempt to trace the cables to their other ends because it appeared major disassembly would be required, but I did access the radio module and, as you can see in the photo, discovered two connectors rather than the single connector on the right side that I expected to find. To try to determine what the function of the left side cable was, I unplugged it to see if it had any impact on the operation the stereo. There was no evident change at all, unless I've overlooked something.
If unplugging the cable doesn't have an adverse effect on the radio's operation, I thought we could order one of Motorcycle Dave's custom SM10 cables, mount the SM10 in the rear trunk per Dave's video, and then my spouse could stream Spyder music to her headset.
However, before ordering the cable, it would be very helpful to know whether the left cable is necessary or not. And thank you for your patience in reading all this!
