The Sound Storm DD 658 is a decent quality replacement radio for older cars and appears to be very similar to the BOSS Boss Audio Systems B9351WRC. Other than the lack of Bluetooth and some cosmetic differences in the plastic trim, I believe them to be made by the same manufacturer. The remotes work one another. It doesn’t take a whole lot of CSI reverse engineering skills to figure it out they’re probably coming from the same vendor.
Our son has a 2002 Honda Accord and both the CD player and the cassette deck had died of old age. AM/FM when you’re 19 is apparently no longer adequate. “The struggle is real!" A quick determination of his needs was straightforward: play MP3s from the micro SD, play CDs, and use the aux in for his MP3 player. He has an uncool flip phone, so the Bluetooth was superfluous but I went ahead and spent another $20 on inexpensive backup camera.
Installation was very similar to the Boss into the CR-V: I used a Scosche quick crimp adapter harness Scosche HA08BCB Harnesses with Butt Connectors for 98 Honda Accord was purchased along with a license plate frame backup camera Esky EC135-05 Waterproof High Definition Color Wide Viewing Angle License Plate Car Rear View Camera with 7 Infrared Night Vision LED.
I reused the heavy-gauge steel factory radio brackets after tapping the Honda locating pins flat rather than the enclosed brackets, which while flimsy, probably would’ve been adequate. All told, it took less than 45 minutes to pull the old radio, remove brackets, crimp on the harness, and install it. The most time consuming part was trimming down the enclosed gap trim plate to fit properly behind the Honda fascia….