★ Electronics & Safety

Modern tech. Older cars.

Add safety features, dashcams, and entertainment systems to vehicles that didn't come with them. Wired in cleanly through the headliner and A-pillar — no exposed cables, no rattles. Aftermarket components, professionally installed.

Safety FeaturesBlind-spot, sensors, cameras
DashcamsFTX, Thinkware
EntertainmentPioneer, headrest LCDs
Hidden WiringThrough headliner, A-pillar
What This Category Covers

The tech your 2025 car has, added to whatever you drive.

Safety features (blind-spot monitors, parking sensors, backup cameras), dashcams (FTX, Thinkware, single or dual or parking-mode), and entertainment systems (Pioneer head units with Apple CarPlay, headrest LCDs, overhead screens, speaker upgrades). All three live under "Electronics & Safety" because they share the same install discipline: hidden wiring, professional install, no damage to your existing electronics.

Wired in clean — no rattles, no exposed wires.

The three sub-categories below break out the work. Decision guide further down helps you pick what's worth adding to your specific vehicle.

Five Electronics Categories

What goes where.

Safety, recording, entertainment, lighting, and convenience — all wired in clean and tucked away.

Decision Guide

Which electronics are worth it?

If your car is older than 2015 and lacks blind-spot monitors or backup camera...
Add Safety Features. Modern safety tech retrofits cleanly. Especially worth it for parents giving older cars to teen drivers, or anyone used to safety alerts in a rental.
If you commute, share the road with aggressive drivers, or worry about insurance disputes...
Add a Dashcam. Front-only is the budget pick; front + rear with parking mode is the comprehensive setup. Hardwired install means it's invisible and works while you're parked.
If your factory head unit doesn't have Apple CarPlay or the audio is weak...
Upgrade with Pioneer head unit. Steering wheel controls and factory backup camera both integrate. Speaker upgrade ($300–500 add) makes a much bigger difference than the head unit alone.
If you've got kids and long road trips ahead...
Headrest LCD monitors on the Entertainment page. Most modern systems support HDMI input, USB media, and some have Wi-Fi for streaming. Quote per vehicle.
If you're a fleet manager or rideshare driver...
Dashcams are the highest-ROI single addition (insurance impact, liability defense). Combine with blind-spot and backup cam for a full driver-safety package. See Fleet Services for volume programs.
Our Work

A few we're proud of.

Recent installs from the shop. See the gallery for more.

What Goes Into Your Quote

Pricing depends on system + vehicle complexity.

Single feature vs. bundled package, brand choice, paint match for sensors, complexity of routing into your existing wiring. Tell us your vehicle and what you want and we'll quote within one business day.

Better pricing than we could put in writing here.

Common Questions

What people ask across all three.

Will the new electronics work with my factory systems?
Depends on what. Most aftermarket electronics are independent from OEM systems. Sensors do not connect to factory screens. Headunits do work with factory controllers.
Will the wiring be visible?
No. We pull wiring through the headliner, down the A-pillar, and behind the kick panel. From the driver's seat, you only see the device (camera, sensor, mirror, head unit) — not the wiring that powers it.
How long do these installs take?
Single feature (e.g., backup camera or hardwired dashcam): same day. Bundle (safety features + dashcam + audio): 1 to 2 days.
Can I add features later, or do I need to do it all at once?
You can add later. Common pattern: dashcam first (highest ROI alone), safety features second when the car ages, entertainment when needed for family use. Each install is its own visit; we don't require a bundle.
What about my warranty?
Manufacturer warranties on the components (typically 1–2 years on safety/dashcam systems; longer on Pioneer head units). Our workmanship warranty on the install itself. Properly installed aftermarket electronics don't affect your factory vehicle warranty — the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act of 1975 protects you against that.