That’s almost always a power supply issue, not a faulty stereo itself.
Your radio has two power feeds, and one of them isn’t doing its job:
๐ง What’s happening
Car stereos use:
- Constant 12V (memory wire) → keeps presets, clock, settings
- Switched 12V (ignition wire) → turns the radio on/off with the key
If the constant 12V is missing, the stereo “forgets” everything every time you turn the car off.
๐จ Most common causes
1. Blown fuse (most likely)
There’s usually a fuse labeled:
- “RADIO”
- “ACC”
- or “DOME”
If the memory fuse is blown, presets reset every time.
2. Wiring issue (very common after installing aftermarket stereo)
If you installed or modified the radio:
- Yellow wire (memory) may not be connected to constant power
- Red wire (ignition) might be swapped incorrectly
Classic symptom:
๐ Radio works, but resets every key cycle
3. Incorrect wiring harness
If you used an adapter harness:
- Some cars have different pin layouts
- Cheap or incorrect harness = no constant power feed
4. Weak or disconnected car battery
Less common, but possible:
- Battery voltage drops too low when off
- Or battery was recently disconnected
5. Bad ground connection
If ground is loose:
- Memory can be unstable
- Radio may reset intermittently
๐ ️ How to fix it
Start simple:
- Check fuses (dashboard + engine bay)
-
Pull the radio and verify wiring:
- Yellow → constant 12V (always live)
- Red → ignition (only live with key)
-
Use a multimeter if possible:
- Yellow wire should have 12V even with key OFF
- Fix wiring or replace harness if needed
๐ก Quick test
Turn the key OFF and:
- If the radio loses everything instantly → no constant power
- If it keeps memory for a while → possible battery/voltage issue
Bottom line
Your stereo is basically “losing its memory” because it’s not getting constant power.
Fix that one wire or fuse, and the problem disappears.

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