Go to crutchfield.com and look at the Pioneer speakers. When I get home tonite I can give you the exact model # of the ones I put in. The back ones are not easy only because removing the panels is hard. Replacing them willl improve the sound but you can't expect a whole lot because the radio is not all that great, it has a very low power output. The origional speakers were cheap cr-p and now being 20 years old the cones have stiffened up so they sound even worse. Any replacement will sound better. The main limitation on the speakers is physical dimensions. If you do not want to modify anything you have to find a replacement that can fit right in. As it is you will have to bend the bracket on the rear speakers to get them to fit (but that's not visible and it doesn't affect the sound). To get the rear panels off you have to use a heat gun (or hair dryer) and a putty-knife and go slow and easy to avoid damaging the plastic panel. The front speakers are hard to do only because you have to work against gravity and the small washers and nuts always seem to fall in your eye or down your shirt. When I was at the wharehouse in Cleavland I saw a whole PALLET of speakers! They were the origional ones so they are also 20 + years old. David Teitelbaum vin 10757 --- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, Eric Itzel <eric@xxxx> wrote: > Hey everybody > > I'm looking into replacing my speakers, both front and rear, for better > ones. I'm not looking to change the setup or do any major modifications, > but I'd just like to hear some better sound. Does anyone have any > recommendations on what to buy and where to buy it? > > Thanks in advance > > Eric Itzel > vin 4433 > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]