From what I understand is much like you need your radio on to receive the activation signal, you also need it on to receive the deactivation signal. When you first deactivate they send the signal more frequently in the beginning and slowly stop sending the signal. When I upgraded to an inno I heard about this so I just took my roady2 radio and put in the trunk for a while. Shortly there after I decided to see if it worked because I was going on a road trip and it worked and still works for about three years now, maybe longer. Not sure if this works with newer radios because the inno was constantly asking me to leave it on for 10 mins to verify account. From what I understand is much like you need your radio on to receive the activation signal, you also need it on to receive the deactivation signal. When you first deactivate they send the signal more frequently in the beginning and slowly stop sending the signal. ![]() When I upgraded to an inno I heard about this so I just took my roady2 radio and put in the trunk for a while. Shortly there after I decided to see if it worked because I was going on a road trip and it worked and still works for about three years now, maybe longer. Not sure if this works with newer radios because the inno was constantly asking me to leave it on for 10 mins to verify account. Well found out the trick was to turn your radio off, cancel Sirius and then let your radio sit for a lil over 120 days.the length of time the deactivation packet sent to your radio lasted. ![]()
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March 2018
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